Openings for Teaching Assistants in the Women's Studies Program Summer and Fall 354 Lorch Hall 763-2047 a non-discriminatory, affirmative action employer U-M Women in Science Program, CEW, presents - CAREERS IN TECHNOLOGY - Panel Discussion Career Information OPEN TO EVERYONE Thursday, Feb. 18-Noon-2 pm East Conference Room, Rackham Page 2-Tuesday, February 16, 1982-The Michigan Daily Congress developing stricter GSL standards (Continued from Page i) percent to 10 percent of the loan. Another plan under consideration would roll back the degree to which the government subsidizes the interest on the loan. This latter alternative would accelerate the schedule by which students must pay back their loans, so that students -would have to pay off their loans completely within two years of its expiration date. Two other plans being considered would hike the Interest rate charged on GSLs beyond the current 7 percent, or would limit the number of students who would be granted the loans. GROTRIAN confirmed that graduate students are the most likely victims of the Reagan administration's changes, since a plan to make them completely ineligible for GSLs is being backed by the White House. Should any combination of these proposals be enacted, Grotrian said, "some students may decide to forestall enrollment, or seek other institutions." Loans to graduate students currently account for $24 million of GSL funds, said Nowak. In the event of their elimination from the program, Nowak says students will be instructed to apply for financial aid through the Auxiliary Loans to Assist Students (ALAS) program. More than 15,000 University students now receive GSLs totaling $45 million. Nowak said it is impossible to forecast the total dollar amount which will be available for next year, or to calculate fluctuation in the demand for GSLs. During the 1981-82 academic year, only 115 University students who ap- plied for GSLs were declared ineligible, Nowak said. STUDENTS *FACULTY STAFF NOMINATE OUTSTANDING TEACHERS, RESEARCHERS, AND COUNSELORS FOR A FACULTY AWARD: ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: For Associate and Full Pro- fessors. RECOGNITION AWARD: For Assistant, Associate and Junior Full Professors. AMOCO OUTSTANDING TEACHER AWARD: For Regu- lar Faculty Who Have Demonstrated Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. Fisher, Hunter winners in City Council primary (Continued from Page 1) although Stacy Stephanopoulos, a student candidate, brought in many student votes, she lost to Greene that year. Jeffrey Gallatin, the uncontested Republican candidate in the First Ward, received 34 votes. "I was sur- prised anybody would vote for anybody in a primary election where you're un- contested.: I didn't even vote for myself," he said. Less than seven percent of the First Ward's 15,032 registered voters turned out in the primary, and less than five percent of the 14,575 registered voters in the Third Ward voted. INCUMBENT Councilmember Fisher received more than three times the votes Hann did, 439 to 140. Fisher previously ran in the Fourth Ward, and with reapportionment was moved to the Third Ward. Fisher said he was disappointed in SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State ........668-9329 East U. at South U......662-0354 Arborland ..............971-9975 Maple Village ...........761-2733 the low voter turnout, but added, "We expected to win." Hann said he has "agreed to support Mr. Fisher 100 percent. We got close to the total (votes) we expected." Raphael Ezekiel, the uncontested Democrat in the Third Ward, received a surprising 126 votes. "We are very happy and pleased with the votes we received," Ezekiel said. "We plan on winning this ward." In the April elections for city council, Fisher will oppose Ezekiel for the Third Ward and Hunter will oppose Gallatin in the First Ward. Daily staff writers Chris Salata and Scott Stuckal filed reports for this story. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Poland blames U.S. for martial law protests WARSAW- Upset by demonstrations and the weekend discovery of a powerful bomb, officials charged yesterday that the United States backs rising resistance to martial law that is pushing Poland toward "civil war." Police said a 13-pound time bomb they discovered Saturday in Lubin would have caused a "massacre" if they had not defused it and blamed protests marking two months of martial law in Poznan and Swidnik on leaflets in- spired by Washington. "The same forces which before the imposition of martial law Dec. 13 pushed the nation towards tragic catastrophe have efforted and will continue to effort to use this direction. The whole bitter anti-Polish campaign by President Reagan and his closest allies serves this goal," said the official Communist Party newspaper, Trybuna Ludu. Security patrols searched Warsaw residents thoroughly yesterday for the clandestine leaflets. A military patrol stoped foreign reporters near the Foreign Ministry press center and attempted to confiscate their dispatches. "Threats are made, such as 'Death to the Reds,' and they assure that a civil war will take place," the newspaper said. "All that forms a definite area of danger." AFL-CIO attacks budget BAL HARBOUR, Fla.- AFL-CIO leaders, saying military spending should be scrutinized as closely as social programs for possible savings, proposed an alternative federal budget yesterday that would include a new income surtax. Opening its annual mid-winter meeting, the AFL-CIO Executive Council placed blame for the continuing recession and 8.5 percent unemployment rate squarely on President Reagan's shoulders. Its alternative would restore $41 billion in budget cuts proposed by the president and add $23 billion in new obs-creating programs. These costs would be partially financed by $31 billion in increased revenue from a revised tax structure, and with the military increase financed by a progressive surtax on individual and corporate incomes. The largest portion of increased tax revenue would come by capping 1982 and 1983 individual tax cuts at $700 per family, a measure the federation said would bring in an additional $20 billion. Storms batter Northwest The most severe rain and windstorms since a January deluge that killed 37 pushed rivers in the Pacific Northwest to flood stage yesterday, triggered avalanche warnings in Washington and threatened northern California with mudslides. Northern California authorities searching for the body of a 5-year-old boy swept away in the rain-swollen waters of the American River while on a camping trip said their prospects of finding him were bleak. The new storms set off snow and mudslides in Washington, burying one highway worker who had been clearing debris. Avalanche warnings were issued as rapidly rising temperatures melted more than 3 feet of snow that accumulated in some mountain areas since last Wednesday, making top layers unstable. U.S. ambassador calls U.N. 'dismal show' WASHINGTON- U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick called the United Nations sessions in New York a "dismal show" yesterday, and said the world organization is functioning "opposite to the intentions of its founders." The outspoken ambassador also said most of the world's governments "are, by our standards, bad governments." In a question and answer session following a speech to. the American Legion, Kirkpatrick was asked if it is worth $5 million a day to the United States to "cast one vote against the world. She replied that some U.N. work is "very positive," such as refugee work, the World Health Organization and meteorological programs. But as far as what is going on in New York, she said, "then I guess I believe it is a very dismal show." Vol. XCII, No. 113 Tuesday, February 16, 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 Michigan Laily 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. 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