Ninety- Two Years Of Editorial Freedom e~it 43UU 3Iati g THE USUAL Partly cloudy today with a high in the upper teens. F Vol. XCII, No. 108 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, February 10, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages a AGENCY TYPE OF UNIT AVAILABILITY Baker Management Older and modern single 18 units, about 662-6626 family homes; older apartments 7 openings Andrus Davis Co. Modern apartments; single 170 units; openings 662-5911 family homes; efficiencies unknown Campus Management Older and modern apartments not available 663-4101 Tom Clark Older and modern apartments 65 units; about 996-2836 30 openings David Copi Older apartments and 90 units; about 663-5609 houses 35 openings Dahlman Apartments Modern homes; 1, 2, 3 102 units; about 761-7600 bedroom apts; efficiencies 75 openings Warren Hamill Modern and older apartments 125 units; about 769-1196 15 openings Vernon Hutton Modern apartments and 80 units; about 663-9268 efficiencies 48 openings Perry Klein Single family homes; 30 units; openings 475-3259 apartments within homes unknown Maize and Blue Modern 1, 2, 3 bedroom apts. 166 units; closed 761-3131 waiting list McKinley Properties Apartments and houses up 360 units; about 769-8520 to six bedrooms; efficiencies 230 openings Modern Apartments Apartments and houses 200 units 668-6906 Openings unknown Sang Y. Nam 1, 2, 3 bedroom apartments; 81 units 662-0351 efficiencies about 20 openings Old Town Realty Older houses split into 240 units; 663-8989 apartments about 120 openings Post Realty Modern 1land 2 bedroom 115 units 761-8220 apts; efficiencies openings unknown Reagan tells critics 'Put up or shut, up' From AP and UPI INDIANAPOLIS -President Reagan, winding up a sales trip for his economic program, declared yesterday he has yet to witness a better product offered by critics who should "put up or shut up." But in Washington, there was no sur- cease of the outcry, from foe and even friend, over his big-deficit scenario for the new fiscal year. One key Democrat, in fact, did put up - with a plan to freeze expenditures and junk the 1983 phase of the president's tax cut. EVEN SENATE Republican Leader Howard Baker, a Reagan loyalist, found that alternative "intriguing." The president, on a two-day trip to the Midwest, complained that even before he announced the 1983 budget, calling for a deficit of $91.5 billion "you could hear the sound of knees jerking all over Washington. The knee-jerk reaction and instant analysis are as hasty ,as they were incorrect." Meanwhile, Reagan's chief economic strategists were buffeted by Republicans and Democrats alike as they opened the administration's, pitch for the $717.6 billion package on Capitol Hill. House Republican Leader Robert Michel of Illinois listened to -Budget Director David Stockman and Treasury Secretary Donal Regan, then pronoun- ced the deficit "mind-boggling ... hard to swallow." IN THE SENATE, Democrat Ernest Hollings of South Carolina was said to be shaping a counterplan which would freeze spending on social and defense programs at 1982 levels , Reagan wan- ts a big boost for the Pentagon - and scuttle the cut in 1983 of another 10 per- cent in income taxes. Baker, while not yet jumping Reagan's ship, said the idea was "most interesting." Reagan, in an address to the In- diana Legislature, said that "We will not play hop-scotch economics, jum- ping here and jumping there as the daily situation changes. To the paid political complainers, let me say gas politely as I can "Put up or shut up." Earlier, Reagan told a joint session of the Iowa Legislature in Des Moines that the critics of his three-year tax cut plan were "elitists" who said "the American See REAGAN, Page 7 Clean-up of cisbestos pipes at Union 0 begin today By DAVID SPAK Ravalp Management 665-2341 Modern apartments and efficiencies Real Invest Older homes; modern 996-5929 apartments; efficiencies Red Oak Management Modern apartments and 662-3347 efficiencies Neil Snook Modern and older apartments; 996-1444 efficiencies University Towers Modern apartments, and 761-2680 efficiencies. 200 units; about 80 openings 100 units not available total unknown; about 33 openings 24 units; openings unknown Wilson White 995-9551, Modern apartments and efficiencies; older buildings The race is on! Mad dash for housing begins University officials decided yester- day that workers will begin to remove the carcinogen asbestos found in the Michigan Union more than a week ago as soon as the necessary work orders can be filed. Work may begin as early as this afternoon, they said. William Joy, the director. of the University's Department of Environ- mental Health and Safety, (EHS) said- the actual cleanup and removal of the pipe insulation containing asbestos "should take about a day or a day and a half." PLANS WERE made to remove the insulation at a meeting between representatives of the Union, EHS, the Schiller Construction Company (the Illegal money pyramids cropping up-at'U By STACY POWELL A new extra-curricular activity has hit campus, the only problem is that it is against the law. So-called Money pyramids have arrived, introduced by students from Michigan State Univer- sity, according to one student par- ticipating in the scheme. Fraternities have received the majority of the criticism for being in- volved in money pyramids, said David Wright, president of Sigma Chi frater- nity, but "people from a lot of different houses - fraternities, sororities, dorms even apartments - are involved in this (pyramids)." THE SYSTEM at the University requires a person to pay $50 to par- ticipate in the pyramid. After entering the structure, the new member must then recruit two more people who each pay $50 to the person currently at the head of the pyramid. Several pyramids may be going on at the same time. A member can make up to eight hun- dred dollars before being forced to leave the system, according to a par- ticipant who requested anonymity See ILLEGAL, Page 7 company renovating the Union), and Eames and Brown Contractors. Frank Hui, a safety coordinator for EHS, said he took three samples of the material from the Union. "The first' sample was positive," Hui said. "It contained at least 20 percent asbestos." The other two samples have not returned from the Environmental Research Group, a local laboratory where the samples were sent for tsting, Hui said., "But I'll bet money they have asbestos," Hui said. THE AFFECTED areas of the Union include a small portion of the ground floor and parts of the basement. All the areas involved have been sealed off from public access. Joy and Hui both said that only pipe insulations samples have proved to con- tain asbestos, and that no ceiling tiles have, been found to contain the material. The asbestos found on the ground floor "is not much of a problem because it is contained in a small area," Hui said adding that the asbestos in the basement also poses little threat to the public because the basement is not a public area. JOY ADDED, "We are primarily concerned with safety of the employees working in the area." Meanwhile, the state Department of See ASBESTOS, Page 2 By FANNIE WEINSTEIN The annual (rat) race for off- campus housing is'on, but if you haven't entered yet, don't worry- you are still in the running. There is no reason for students to rush into any deals or to sign a lease for the first apartment they visit, ac- cording to Jo Williams, assistant director of the off-campus housing of- fice. WILLIAMS described the 13.7 per- cent vacancy rate reported this fall by the housing office as "unusually high." . According to an informal survey of rental agencies, however, business is off only slightly, and houses for more than six people are the most sought- after abodes. "Students are worried about if there will be large, old houses," Williams said. "But those go from friend to friend. They never xget on the market." WILLIAMS suggested that the popularity of the :homes is connected to the high vacancy rate, because students are doubling and tripling up to reduce individual costs. "The bigger they are, the faster they go," said a spokesperson for Modern Management, an agency which handles 200 housing units. "Your larger groups tend to get 'together faster." Students began calling about possible openings during the first week in January, the spokesperson said, which she described as the "typical" time. "THEY'RE moving,' she said, "but we still have a good mix.' Independent agent Warren Hamill said he expects a large turnover in the units he handles. "The students don't like to stay in qn place. They like to try a different scene," Hamill ex- plained. Hamill said he agrees that the market might be a little off because of the current economic situation, but added that "the ones that are in good locations are fairly easy to rent ... The students are moving closer to the classrooms." According to Williams, landlords have reported rent increases averaging from two to seven percent, with the highest at 12 percent. Some agencies, however, have projected nominal increases, particularly for tenants renewing their leases. TRAFFIC AT the housing infor- mation office is no different from previous years, Williams said. But to help handle the load and reach more people, two students have been hired as off-campus housing peer advisors. Williams said the housing office suggests that students, especially novice renters, seek advice about a lease before signing it. For example, she said, many students don't under- stand the "joint and several" clause included in nearly all leases, which makes each roommate responsible for the rent of the entire apartment. OTHER questions often asked by students concern utility costs, lan- dlord improvements, and roommate compatibility, Williams said. "We strongly encourage written word over oral contracts," she added. The Ann Arbor Tenants Union is planning a series of workshops in the dormitories to "inform and educate students about their rights before they get into private housing," an AATU spokesperson said. .Topics of the workshops, for which no dates have yet been set, will in- clude eviction, maintenance and security deposits, the spokesperson said. Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL Modern.Day stalactites Burton Tower seens to melt into Hill Auditorium which bears the burden of quick thaw and freeze. TODAY A different letter to the editor THE DAILY yesterday received a letter from Vice President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye as a correction to a story that appeared in the Daily Feb. 9. The article stated: "He (Frye) yesterday modified that list (of academic priorities) to include as a Loneliness hurts Loneliness may be hazardous to your health. Scientists claim that lone males run two or three times the risk of developing heart disease than their more social counter- parts. According to Leonard Syme, a professor of epidemiology at Berkeley, the discovery cannot be ex- plained by changes in the dirt, differences in cigarette smoking, high blood pressure or high levels of cholesterol in the blood. The study showed that social isolation, indicated must pick up Work Study hiring forms by Monday, Feb. 15 in order to keep the award. Hiring forms can be picked up at the Student Employment Office, 2503 SAB. Call 7634128 for more information. 0 The Daily almanac Jimmy Durante, the actor with that unforgettable profile, was born on Feb. 10, 1893. Also on this date in history: " In 1942, the American auto industry shut down its Dissertation awards The Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies is now accepting applications for the 1982 Eggertsen Disser- tation Prize in the history of education. One thousand dollars will be awarded to the winner. The $1000 prize is in- tended for use in preparing the award-winning, dissertation for publication as a book, monograph or articles in scholarly journals. Eligible dissertations are those com- pleted in the past 12 months by alumni of any graduate program of the University. The Prize will be awarded to that dissertation which, in the opinion of the Selections i - I I