Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom cl Si r kiI BRISK Today will be mostly cloudy withthe high expec- ted to be in the low 30s. V..ai,,-. ! .. l-AL.. 1'7og') h 1R9 Thc.AA;e k;hin n n iA -..* VOL. AU[.J, NO. I I/ %.vpyrlgnr 1 Yom, 1 n@ Ivilf-nlgun L ally Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, March 2, 1982 Ten Cents Twelve Paaes ...., .. , ..yam a Jaruzelski meets with Brezhnev in Moscow MOSCOW (AP) - Poland's martial law ruler, Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski, blamed U.S. sanctions for aggravating the Polish crisis and said yesterday that Soviet aid is essential to solving his nation's "very grave" economic problems. In a dinner speech after opening two days of talks with Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev, Jaruselski described the Soviet-Polish alliance as "lasting and inviolable" and pledged that Poland will not be a "weak link" in the Soviet bloc. THE VISIT IS the first to the Soviet Union by Jaruzelski since he proclaimed the military government Dec. 13 in a crackdown on social unrest and the independent labor union Solidarity. The Polish press gave lavish atten- tion to Jaruzelski's visit to Moscow, proclaiming a "new stage in cooperation" with the Soviets. Evening TV news showed Jaruzelski in meetings with Brezhnev, who per- sonally met the Polish military ruler and other officials at Moscow s airport and escorted them on a round of wreath- laying ceremonies. JARUZELSKI said Poland needs more aid to bail out its economy, which owes an estimated $26.5 billion to Western governments and banks. The Soviet Union has reportedly suplied millions of dollars in aid to Poland since Jaruzelski imposed martial law Dec. 13 and 16 months of labor unrest and challenges to Communist authority by the new suspended trade union Solidarity. "Our situation is also being significantly complicated by the economic sanctions introduced by the American administration, as well as under its pressure-by the governmen- ts of some other capitalist countries," Jaruzelski said in the speech, later distributed by Tass, the official Soviet news agency. See JARUZELSKI, Page 7 Women's ed center' faces STUDENTS FROM ALL over the country protest president Reagan's planned cuts in financial aid in front of the White House yesterday. Thousans protest cuts, rn student ai- atDC~rly By F'ANNIE WEINSTEIN Special to the Daily WASHINGTON - Thousands of college students, gathered here for a massive rally protesting proposed administration cutbacks in student finanical aid, converged on Capitol Hill yesterday to lobby against the president's budget package. The students filled the hallways of House and Senate office buildings, asking to speak with their legislators to urge them to vote down the proposed cutbacks. After a full day of lobbying, the students gathered on the steps of the Capitol to listen to addresses from a number of key legislators, including House Speaker Thomas "Tip" O'Neill (D-Mass.). . AFTER travelling all night, about 40 students from three Michigan colleges - the University's Ann Ar- bor and Dearborn campuses and Alpena Community College - filed off of charter buses in Washington and headed for the offices of several Michigan senators and represen- tatives. They joined about 5,000 other college students, many of whom said they came to Washington because they were afraid more cutbacks in financial aid would put a college education out of reach. They came from schools as dif- ferent as the University of California - Berkeley and Canisius College in Buffalo, N.Y. Some schools sent just a few students, others, like Connec- ticut's Wesleyan University, sent as many as 600. All were united in their fierce opposition to the Reagan ad- ministration's budget cuts. "MY FAMILY is in a middle-in- come bracket, so we're in a lot of danger," said sophomore John Allocca, who left school at Georgetown University yesterday to travel across town to lobby on the See STUDENTS, Page 5 revie% By LOU FINTOR Key University administrators1 yesterday revealed that yet another' non-academic unit-the Center for the Continuing Education of Women-has been targeted for a comprehensive review which may result in severe budget cuts or the Center's outright elimination.+ Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye said the Center will join two previously targeted units-the Institute for Labor and Industrial Relations, and the Institute for the Study of Mental Retardation and Related Disabilities- in cost efficiency reviews that will begin within the next few days. THE REVIEW process will be essen- tially the same as last year's ad- ministrative examination of the Exten- sion Service and other non-academic' units, said Frizell Vaughn,- a faculty member of the committee which will aid in the reviews. Last year's review of the Extension Service resulted in a fund reduction of 90 percent. Vaughn's Budget Priorities Commit-1 tee is an advisory group composed of faculty, administration; and student members. The initiation of these reviews will eventually be part of the ad- ministration's massive retrenchment effort-dubbed the "five-year plan"- designed to reduce the University's General Fund by $20 million over the next five years. FRYE, HOWEVER, said the CEW review will be substantially different from other recent unit examinations. A review subcommittee under Frye will first examine the Center's educational performance and quality. Later in the review process, a BPC subcommittee cuts will consider the center's budget for possible reductions-or total elimination. The ILIR and ISMRRD reviews will both be carried out solely by the BPC. According to Frye, the CEW review has "been pending for about a year," and he hopes to have a examining sub- committee appointed within the week. THE CENTER'S 1981-82 General Fund budget allocation is more than $237,000. The center also received $41,200 in funds earmarked for scholar- ships and fellowships this year. "Any review that is conducted will be similar to those conducted last year, said Jamie Moeller, a Michigan Student Assembly representative on the BPC. According to Moeller, the examining subcommittee will consider the quality of the program, its centrality, cost, and level of services, as outlined in Regen- tal guidelines. "WE'RE NOT going, in with any specific budget figures," said Moeller, "if the review committee finds that the program is good, I'm sure there won't be too much of a reduction." ,Frye has charged his subcommittee with looking at whether the center duplicates services rendered by other University units and whether there exists a need for the center's continued operation. A document which Frye will give to his subcommittee claims the review was initiated because many of the ser- vices offered by the center are already offered by other offices at the Univer- sity. Services cited specifically were financial aid and counseling. The document also said that because many of the problems of inequality previously See WOMEN'S, Page 5 Legislators work on coalition to defeat cuts By BETH ALLEN Special to the Dpily WASHINGTON - Legislators and their aides who met with student lobbyists here yesterday said they hoped to form a coalition to defeat cutbacks in financial aid to students proposed by the White House. While a number of legislators said they remained convinced that student aid must be cut, some said the students' initiative in traveling to Washington to protest the proposals would help in their efforts to block more cutbacks. ABOUT 5,000 students pounded the marble hallways of the.House and. Senate office buildings yesterday, fighting their way past receptionists See CONGRESSIONAL, Page 7 Local Nazis plan rally for later this month Regents debate hi-tech park deal By JIM SCHREITMUELLER A combination of awareness and self- control will be key in the Ann Arbor community's reaction to a neo-Nazi demonstration scheduled for later this month in front of City Hall, officials said yesterday. The Security Services Action Group, a local organization with about -15 members, is not expected to draw a very large crowd. ALTHOUGH THERE is a potential for counter-demonstrations to the Security Services Action Group rally, planned for March 20, City Coun- cilmember Lowell Peterson said he will try to dissuade people from a direct counterdemonstration. "That's just what they (the S.S. Ac- tion Group) want. We'd be falling into the trap, being provoked in the way they want us to be provoked," Peterson said. "They are clearly trying to get at- tention.'' Peterson said the community should "show that the people of Ann Arbor are unified in their opposition, to show that we are aware," but to exercise .self- control. THE S.S. ACTION Group probably will not draw a very large crowd for its demonstration, according to Richard Loebenthal, State director of the Anti- Defamation League in Detroit. Loeben- thal's office acts as a watchdog over the activities of organizations such as the S.S. Action Group, which he said posesa a "minimal threat.,' "They're a bunch of crumbs," Loebenthal said. They chant slogans and wave placards, he said, but most of the time they don't stir much reaction. "If not for theswastikas (worn at the demonstrations), nobody would even care," Loebenthal claimed. THERE WILL be flexible police protection for the group, according to Councilmember Peterson, depending on how the demonstration goes. Feeling threatened by the scheduled rally, Michael Brooks of the B'Nai B'Rith Hillel Foundation called a meeting yesterday for concerned citizens to discuss possible measures against the S.S. Action Group. Several members of the Foundation 'are "concerned and outraged," accor- ding to Brooks. He said there may be a counter-demonstration in a different sector of the city, but no definite plans have yet been made. Daily staff writer Lisa Spector filed a report for this story. By JANET RAE Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) turned an otherwise routine Regents meeting Feb. 19 into a heated discussion of the board's role in for- mulating University policy. The debate sprang up around the University's new role in helping to plan a high technology research park for the Ann Arbor area. Last month, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff signed an agreement with land developer Richad Wood promising the University's aid in planning the 400-acre site near North Campus. AT THEIR February meeting, the Regents said they had been briefed earlier on Brinkerhoff's plans to deal with Wood. According to Baker, however, no decision authorizing Brinkerhoff to sign an agreement was made, and that Regents had asked that they matter be brought to their atten- tion before official action was taken. "I don't mean to diminish what you've done," Baker said. "I know how important it is to the institution and the state. But it was my understanding these issues would be brought before the Regents before agreement was en- tered into. "I don't know any more about it now than I did then," Baker said. "I'm just reading the papers." BAKER SAID not enough infor- mation-names of corporations, in- dividuals involved in the agreement, and more specific details about the planning surrounding the project - is available to the Regents or the public. "The University is placing its reputation and influence in the matter with a private developer," he said. "I should think that would be a matter of policy (and therefore subject to the board's approval)." Regent Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) said she agrees that more care should have been taken to inform the Regents of the agreement's progress. "I WOULD HOPE that as the ad- ministration finds issues they wouild make sure the board is involved in a timely manner," she said. And, according to Regent Robert Nederlander (D-Birmingham), there are problems within the agreement it- See BAKER, Page 2 Baker ... wanted Regents to be consulted State Rep. investigates research park agreement By SCOTT STUCKAL Results of a probe into the recent agreement bet- ween the University and two private development corporations to create a high technology research park near North Campus are expected to be released today, according to state officials. In the wake of complaints about the agreement from several members of the University Board of Regents, investigators under State Rep. Gary Owen (D-Ypsilanti) last week questioned University of- ficials about the secrecy surrounding the agreement. JAMES BRINKERHOFF, University vice president and chief financial officer, signed the agreement with two limited partnerships headed by private developer Richard Wood early last month. It calls for the development of 337 acres near North Campus into a high technology research park. An aide to Owed, who asked not to be identified, said that Owen "is interested in two things: the process used to reach the agreement and the contract itself. The question with the process is, did they follow a logical, out-front process in reaching an agreement," the aide said. According to Richard Kennedy, University vice president for state relations, "In working with a private developer there are certain considerations, and that's what occasioned the secrecy." REGENT DEAN BAKER (R-Ann Arbor) also has voiced complaints about the agreement. (See related story, Page 1). "It was my understanding that we (the Regents) would see the agreement prior to its signing," Baker said. The agreement calls for the University to use its See STATE, Page 5 TODAY- Governing partners MARRIED COUPLE-saying two hears are better than one-have kicked off a campaign to get themselves elected co-governors of Califor- nia. Genevieve Marcus and her husband, Bob Smith, said if elected on the Democratic ticket, they would combine the two offices of governor and lieutenant governor and share their powers. The couple, married 12 years, said they agree on major issues, such as opposition to the death Money isn't everything George and Elaine Dawes are buying a sporting goods store. They got bored at having nothing to do after winning a $1.8 million lottery jackpot. "We don't want to be idle for the rest of our lives," Dawes told reporters. After their big win last year for guessing the results of soccer matches, the couple stopped working. Dames, 39, gave up his job as a salesman and his wife, 37, closed down her neighborhood general store. They bought a luxury house with a swimming pool and a Rolls-Royce and took holidays in the Caribbean, who was finally found living in a ski area. Wood disap- peared while escorting a group of students from Harlin- Simmons University on a three-day snowshoe trip. The sheriff's office, believing something might have happened to him, searched six days for him. Sheriff Harold Thonoff said Wood was traced to the Monarch ski area. "We can't help but feel this man knew we were looking for him," the sheriff said. The bill includes $4,770 for overtime paid deputiessthe sheriff said.The remainder covers food, gasoline, snowmobile oil and telephone tolls. "We know for sure he's in Abilene," he said. "The paper down there " 1957-The University. began experimenting with dorm menus, offering a choice of entrees for the first time. If the experiment was successful, nutritionists said they hoped to later offer a variety of vegetables. * 1972-Rewards totalling over $10,000 were offered for in- formation leading to the apprehension of the arsonist(s) who were respoonsible for over 60 dorm fires during the previous two months. E I :i