Ninety-Two Years of I ditorial 'Freedom P Sit igan 43Iai1Q AVERAGE Partly sunny with a high around 30, and later a chance of light snow. ... - 'Vol. XCII, No. 118 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, March 3, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Supplement All-night transit . service approved By STACY POWELL An inexpensive, all-night transit ser- vice, designed to provide late-night transportation for city residents, beginning March 15 was approved by the City Council at its Monday night meeting. The year-long $89,000 contract finalized an agreement between the Ann Arbor Transit Authority and the Veteran's Cab Company, which offered the lowest bid to the city. ACCORDING to Councilmember Lowell Peterson (D-First Ward), the rate will be $1.50 per person for the taxi service. There will be two taxis available between the hours of 11 p.m. and 3 a.m., and one taxi between 3 a.m. and 6 a.m., Peterson said. The plan will not begin until March 15 because AATA needs time to research the needs of the area, according to Lyn- ne Cole, coordinator of the Public In- terest Research Group in Michigan, which has been active in the develop- ment of the service. "Members of PIRGIM hoped that the fare would be set at $1 instead of $1.50, because one of our goals* was to make the system generally affordable," Cole said. "Our feeling was the cheaper the better, but the $1.50 is reasonable," she added. THE GRANT will allow AATA to operate the taxi service for one year on an experimental basis, according to Perry Schectman, manager of system development for AATA. The funds were provided by the Urban Mass Transpor- tation Administration as well as AATA, he said. House reps. protest cuts in education DETROIT- One robot picks up a section of a car body and gently places it down. Another robot, holding a paint brush, writes the logo of its parent company. At the next booth a different robot clasps a pencil shar- pener and asks in a space-age voice: "Is this what you want?" If you say "yes" the robot drops it in the slot. But if you say "no" the robot apologizes and offers you a comb or a bottle cap. More than 90 companies are in Detroit this week demonstrating "state of the art" technology in robot applications and equipment during what has been called the largest robot show ever. See DETROIT, Page 7 From staff and wire reports WASHINGTON- House Republicans balked at President Reagan's school budget cuts yesterday as Education Secretary Terrel Bell conceded that the quality of education for disadvantaged youths would slip under the program. "Many of these proposals I can't sup- port," declared Rep. John Ashbrook (D-Ohio) during a House Education and Labor Committee meeting. He specifically assailed cuts in vocational education and education for the han- dicapped. ASHBROOK ALSO said his "main concern is that Republican members had minimal impact-next to no impact-on the decisions that are being made." Rep. Augustus Hawkins (D-Calif.) asked Bell if the quality of education for disadvantaged children can be main- tained with a 23 percent cut in funding. "I couldn't make that claim," Bell said. "When you reduce funding, you sacrifice as far as quality is concer- ned." The administration budget proposal cuts federal education funds from about $13 billion to $10 billion and reduces the Education Department to a foundation. Rep. Lawrence DeNardis (R-Conn.) told Bell, "I disagree with almost, everything in the budget as written. I don't know of anybody on this commit- tee-save one or two possibly-who could support the budget you submit- ted. You're going to have to resign yourself to the fact that this budget is going to be rewritten." Rep. Marge Roukema (R-N.J.) said people in her district "are absolutely appalled at the depth of the proposed cuts for guaranteed student loans and the Pell grants" for needy students. SHE SAID, "It is quite doubtful any changes can be made above and beyond what was done last year in the student loan program."~ Rep. William F. Goodling (R-Pa.) told Bell, "We can't afford the defense budget at the expense of the education budget." Thomas Butts, assistant to Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye, who attended the committee meeting, said, "It is fair to say that no one was very pleased, neither Democrats or Republicans." BUTTS SAID that Monday's student financial aid rally on Capitol Hill was Bell ... testifies on budget cuts Daily Photos by MARK GINUIN A UNIMATE ROBOT exchanges "bouillon-like" bars between two pallets (top), while a small PUMA robot picks out a magic marker yesterday at the robot ex- position in Detroit. Dorm lottery rites begin By KRISTIN STAPLETON It ranks with CRISP as one of the most bewildering rituals endured by University students. And its moment has arrived. Yesterday, students in dormitories across campus began submitting ap- plications for the University's housing lottery - the annual drawing which determines who will and who won't live in a dorm next year. AT 1:30 P.M. next tuesday, officials in the individual dorms will begin drawing names of participating lifestyles lter dorm opolicies By KRISTIN STAPLETON The common complaint these days is that the dorms are too chaotic. Neigh- bors constantly pop in and out; ram- bunctious underclassmen throw frisbees down the corridors at 3 a.m., making sure to hit as many doors as possible; and there is, of course, that -one room from which AC/DC emanates constantly. Peace and quiet, some assert, are simply incompatible with dorm life. But it wasn't always so. Just 20 years ago, dorms-then ruled under the heavy hand of a "few" restric- See DORM, Page 7 residents out of a box, setting in motion the complicated proces of assigning rooms to students who wish to continue living in on-campus housing. The lottery system was established at the University in the mid-seventies, when the demand for dormitory rooms exceeded the number of rooms the University. had available. :"Prior to that point," said Marlene Mantyk, a University housing advisor, "there were enough spots in the dorms for everyone who requested one." University officials say, however, that nearly all students currently living in dorms who want to live in University- operated housing will be able to find something - it just may not be the room they want. LATE LAST monthi, the University Housing Office sent out instructions to explain to all present dormitory residents how to reapply for housing. According to housing officials, the lot- tery system differs slightly from dorm to dorm, but some basic rules apply. Students must pick up their ap- plications sometime this week and return them to their respective dorms by noon on Tuesday. The order in which the names are drawn from the box determines the order in which students will be offered leases on various rooms in dorms. Leases will be signed throughout next week until all of the rooms which are not reserved for freshpersons are assigned. Students who sign a lease but did not get the room type or dorm of their choice can put their names on a waiting list on Friday, March 12. STUDENTS WHO did not receive any lease at all may apply for a spot in "non- traditional" housing such as Baits, Cambridge House, Fletcher Hall, or Oxford Housing on March 31. For students who do not "win" in their dorm lotteries, the procedures to get a' room can be very confusing. Housing officials claim, however, that few dorm residents who reapply do not receive leases to some kind of Univer- sity housing. Mantyk said that, last year, housing officials "felt comfortable that students got what they wanted." BUT IN SPITE of the assurances of officials, there are students who are less than satisfied with the lottery. Katie Donohue, an LSA sophomore, did not get a room in the Couzens lottery last year. She had to sign a lease for a spot in Oxford Housing until there was space available in Couzens. Although her story has a happy en- ding, Donohue said she.was scared at first. "I thought I would be living in a tent in the Arb," she said. Another student with lottery problems, Kathleen Gallagher, said she tried to get a room in the South Quad lottery last year but failed. She said her housing dificulties made her "go through a lot of mental torment." GALLAGHER said that the people with See ANNUAL, Page 2 extremely effective in influencing House representatives. "Seeing over 5,000 students demon- strating against budget cuts really boosted the congressmens' morale who stayed with opposition to education budget cuts," Butts added. Commenting on the effects the proposed budget cuts would have on the Title I education program for disadvan- taged children, Bell said he felt he had no choice but to reduce funding for it to $1.9 million because of overall budget constraints. THE PROPOSED cuts would reduce spending from $525 per student to $400, he said. "I don't want to say I've found a magical solution," he added, but "we do know of programs that are suc- cessful at the $400-a-child level." Bell said in his prepared testimony: "We antieipate that many of these reductions infederal funds will be par- tially offset by increased state, local, and individual contributions that will be possible if a revitalized economy im- proves tax bases for property,\ sales, and state income taxes by 1983 and school year 1983-84. Of the $181 billion spent nationally on education, only about 10 percent comes directly from the federal government." Proposed bill lessens draft violations fines By LISA SPECTOR Violators of the March 1 deadline fdr draft registration will be slapped with a $5,000 fine or a five-year prison senten- ce, federal officials say. However, if Congress passes a recently introduced bill, this offense will be reduced from a felony to a misdemeanor. Local post offices, still accepting late registrants, report that 43 men over 18 years of age have registered since Sun- day's deadline. THE' BILL, introduced by Congressman Les Aspen (D- Wisconsin), would eliminate the prison term, and reduce the fine to $200. "We want to make the penalty fit the crime," said Warren Nelson, an ad- ministrative assistant to Aspen. Com- pared to draft evasion, non-registration is "an extremely minor crime," he ad- ded. The official national estimate of violators of the deadline is about 927,000. The Selective Service has 'referred only 183 names to the Justice Department, and no action has yet been taken against any of the offenders. "I DON'T THINK they ever will," Nelson said. "They just used it as a threat to goose more people to register." The bill also proposes that, if the draft is put into effect,' the current penalties be reinstated with a 21-day grace period after induction begins. Nelson said he doesn't know how Capital Hill will receive the bill. "It is still too soon to get a feel for it," he said, adding tht he is optimistic that the response will be positive. Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL IT USED TO BE that when women entered the University they were given copies of "Judy Be Good" to instruct them in the finer points of dorm etiquette. My, how times have changed. TODAY A different approach GROUP OF University students calling themselves "The Not The Spartacus Youth League" will stage a "die-in" at 2:45 p.m. today in front of the LSA Building. When the monthly Nuclear attack warning siren goes off at 2:45, the par- moment last Friday night to scold a theatergoer who put his feet on the stage where Hepburn was starring in the Broadway production of "The West Side Waltz." "You must take your feet off the stage," the actress said to the man in the front row center seat, who had just crossed his legs and put his feet on the rim of the stage. She picked up her lines and the show went on, but during her curtain call, according to company manager David Hedges, the same man stood up and let go with a camera equipped with a flash bulb. Cameras are forbidden in Broadway theaters. "You must never again do a thing like that in the theater," mobile home. While cleaning her living room Monday, she almost swept up a hungry, six-foot boa constrictor. Gosch said that she and her family have been unwittingly rooming with the snake since last July, when they moved into the Salt Lake City suburb. The former owners of the mobile home thought theyhad lost their pet snake but instead it ap- parently took up residence in a heating vent that opened near an artificial fireplace, Gosch said. "I found the snake curled up behind an artificial fireplace which I had moved to clean up under it," she said. "I was kind of shocked." Gosch said her husband called the police departnent, and 1920- Ban lifted on political speeches given in Hill Auditorium. 1965- The University announced a $2.4 million expansion project at the Flint campus. 1976- Scientists from the University, Harvard, MIT, and the University of Alabama met in Ann Arbor to discuss and debate the values and dangers of genetic engineering. 1977- 400 students planned a rent strike against the city's biggest landlord-the University. I- I i