P gilt43U 1E4iI Watch 0u1 for floods today. Dense fc'g durin g the day with scatered showers towavd 9venmng. A high is expectd a ~round 50. Vol. XCII, No. 130 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, March 17, 1982 Ten Cents Eight Pages Ann Arbor sublets abound Brezhnev announces Cheap rent comes easy in summer By FANNIE WEINSTEIN What has air conditioning, a private bath, a washer and dryer and can be gotten for a fraction of its original cost? A summer sublet in Ann Arbor, and those in the market for one have regular tenants at their mercy. Most students stay in Ann Arbor during only the Fall and Winter terms, but are saddled with twelve month leases, either from May to May or Sep- tember to September. These students must therefore sublet their housing during the summer to avoid paying the entire rental costs. STUDENTS SHOULD plan on taking a 20 percent to 50 percent loss on the regular rental rate for apartments and See RENTING, Page 2 m-issile MOSCOW (AP) - President Leonid Brezhnev announced a freeze on deploying medium-range nuclear missiles in the European part of the Soviet Union yesterday but warned of "retaliatory steps" if the United States and its NATO allies station new rockets in Europe. Brezhnev also said that unless the in- ternational situation worsens the Soviet Union plans to "reduce a certain num- ber of its medium-range missiles on its own initiative" west of the Urals, con- sidered the European part of the Soviet Union. PRESIDENT Reagan reacted icily yesterday to Brezhnev's announcement saying the action "simply isn't good enough." A White House spokesman charged. the' Soviet moratorium on medium- range missile installation, far from aiding the arms control process, was part of an effort to give Moscow "un- challenged hegemony" over Europe. Reagan; speaking to the Oklahoma legislature just hours after Brezhnev's revelation, rejected the move as meaningless and said if the Soviet freeze leader is "serious...he will join in real arms reductions." "TO PRESERVE peace, to ensure it for the future, we must not just freeze the production of nuclear arms," Reagan said in remarks added to his prepared address. "We must reduce the exorbitant level that already exists. Most Western European governmen- ts and military specialists reacted cautiously to Brezhnev's moratorium. Europe's strong anti-nuclear arms movement reacted favorably. BRITISH Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, however, dismissed Brezhnev's missile freeze, which con- cerns rockets in the European part of the Soviet Union,'or west of the Ural Mountains. Thatcher told the House of Commons the decision ignored the facts: "Fir- stly, it freezes the total superiority of the Soviet Union in these particular theater nuclear weapons.. Secondly, it ignores the fact that the SS-20 missiles can just as well be targeted on this coun- try and the rest of Europe from beyond the Urals as they can this side of them." See BREZHNEV, Page 3 A TYPICAL line-up of potential houses for sublet on Hamilton Place. Fraser blasts Japanese imports By KENT REDDING Japan's trade with the United States is "lopsided and discriminatory," ac- cording to United Auto Worker's Union President Douglas'Fraser. Fraser, who took time off from the current UAW/General Motors wage concessions talks to come to Ann Arbor eysterday, addressed a crowd on hand at Hill auditorium for the second U.S.- Japan Automotive Industry Conferen- ce. Citing the $16 billion trade deficit between the two countries and con- tinued Japanese import restrictions, Fraser expressed amazement at the naivete of American industry. "I won- der why we let them (the Japanese) out-bargain us. You'd think we'd catch on," Fraser said. FRASER CALLED for Congress to pass a bill that would counter the flood of Japanese auto imports currently streaming into America. The bill, called House bill 3153, would require a higher percentage of foreign car parts to be built in America. Such legislation, however, would violate an international trade agreement of which the United States is a signatory, according to Robert Hudec, a visiting professor of law from Cornell Unviersity, who also spoke at yesterday's conference. THE TRADE agreement, called the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs, signed in 1947 by nearly eighty nations, regulates international free- trade. But Fraser was not worried by such prospects. "We (the UAW) know the arguments against trade restraint," he said. "But I don't believe we should sacrifice our auto workers for the prin- ciple of free trade." While he labelled the Japanese auto industry as "greedy and selfish," Fraser also acknowledged that the woes of the U.S. automakers are not solely due to imports. He pointed to high interest rates and a depressed economy as additional culprits, and even admitted that the quality of American cars had slipped in recent years. "THE BALLGAME has changed now, however," Fraser said, pointing to improvements in American auto quality control over the past 18 months. Fraser also conceded that U.S. auto workers are paid $8 more, on the average, than their Japanese counter- parts. Much of that difference is at- tributable to higher health care costs and the fact that the Japanese yen is undervalued, he added. All these problems add up to an "in- dustry in crisis" Fraser said. He cited the more than 250,000 workers from the "big four" automakers who are laid off indefinitely as proof of that crisis. "THIS CREATES a tremendous im- pact on the (federal) budget," Fraser said. The auto industry's crisis accoun- ts directly for 1 percent of the pation's' See FRASER, Page 2 Regents, to examine, 3 controversial issues By JANET RAE When the University Regents meet tomorrow and Friday they will hear reports from University officials on three controversial subjects: the University's investments in South Africa, steps being taken to close the University's geography department, and the administration's efforts to at- tract greater numbers of minority students to the University. The update on South Africa, part of a 1978 agreement to monitor University investments in U.S. corporations doing business in South Africa, claims that the University's investments have con- tributed to "significant progress" in promoting desegregated work areas and fighting discriminatory wages in the racially segregated nation. OFFICIALS WILL also formally present the University's annual minority report, which will show that while overall minority enrollment has crept slightly upward, the number of blacks at the University has declined. The number of all minority students has climbed by 0.3 percent over the past year, although the number of black students has dropped off by 0.2 percent between Fall 1980 and Fall 1981. THE REPORT also examines the pool of recruitable minority students, possibilities for financial aid, problems the University has retaining minority students already here, and ad- ministration's efforts to attract new minority students. Administration officials will also up- date theRegents on their progress in relocating tenured faculty members from the University's geography department, which will be closed in July. Officials will reportedly tell the Regents that they have been generally successful in finding new positions for the faculty members and in helping un- dergraduate and graduate students finish their degree programs in the field. The Regents will meet tomorrow at 1 p.m. in the ground floor of the Fleming Administration Building. Daily Photo by DIANE WILLIAMS UAW PRESIDENT DOUGLAS Fraser addressed the problems of American trade with Japan at the Second U.S.-Japan Automotive Industry Conference held at Hill auditorium yesterday. American industry steps up production WASHINGTON (AP)- American probably look unrealistically good factories and mines stepped up by comparison. production by 1.6 percent last mon- It would be "a little premature" to th, breaking a string of six monthly make any sweeping statements declines stretching back to the start about the recession's end, said of the recession, new government Robert Ortner, the Commerce figures indicated yesterday. Department's chief economist. Economists inside and outside the "I still believe we will see the government welcomed the new beginning of a genuine upturn in the Federal Reserve Board report but second quarter," he said, referring said it was hardly enough evidence to the three months beginning in to declare the recession had ended. April. THEY POINTED out that One private analyst, David Cross January's industrial production of Chase Econometrics, also spoke figures had been held down by of a "slow beginning of a recovery" terrible weather in some parts of the later this spring. nation and that February's numbers Resignation, By HARLAN KAHN Tom Fous resigned the other day. For Fous, resigning from the Michigan Student Assembly was a big decision, born out of great frustration with the functioning of the campus-wide student government. But for MSA, Fous is merely one of the latest examples of what seems to have become a commonplace - even typical - problem for the assembly. Resignations have been plaguing the assembly sin- ce the very beginning of the year, when the chairper- sons of two major committees decided to give up their posts. IN SUBSEQUENT months, at least ten represen- tatives have left their seats on the council, many citing other time commitments which made it im- possible for them to continue on the assembly. And, in recent weeks, MSA has had difficulty on at least two occasions in achieving the quorum of one half of its membership required by the MSA rules before the regular business meetings can be conduc- absences plague the MSA In a way, it's understandable. Even my interest is starting to peter out.' -Jon Feiger, MSA president ted. Assembly President Jon Feiger discounted the resignations and attendance difficulties, suggesting they are more reflective of the nearing MSA elections than of any apathetic feelings of the students on the council. "IN A WAY, it's understandable," Feiger said. "Even my interest is starting to peter out ... partly because I'm worked out and partly because I'm a lame duck." Feiger has been president of the assem- bly since last April. Records for the number of students who- had resigned last school year could not be obtained, but Feiger did admit that the resignations in the fall caused problems for the assembly. The resignation of the two chairpersons in September plus additional resignations were "a real blow," he said. "We lost a lot of momentum at the very begin- ning." The reasons given by MSA representatives who have resigned are various. Fous said he resigned because he felt disillusioned with the assembly and because he wanted to use his time differently. "I THOUGHT I could change it," he said. "I really didn't know how ... I went in a little idealistic, and thought somehow through my persuasion I could get MSA back to what I thought it was intended to do." He suggested that MSA had strayed from its original role as a student government, and that it needed more direction. Fous, a member of the See RESIGNATIONS, Page 2 DAY Luck o' the Irish OW WOULD you like to purchase and own, complete with deed, a castle in Ireland-for a week? Well, that's what George Cavender, Uni- versity band director did. "Fitzpatrick's Castle" is a 48-unit condominium on the original castle's old apple orchard and guests have full privileges to the castle. The school bands, ever-willing politicians, and beauty queens for parades, parties, and contests of all kinds to honor the saint who drove the snakes from Ireland. If there was one constant it was the various police departments' deter- mination to keep high-spirited rowdiness under control and that meant a crackdown on drinking. The police com- missioner of New York-the home of the world's largest St. Pat's Day celebration - said there will be thousands of of- ficers on duty at today's parade and they will not hesitate to arrest rowdy teenagers. ABC-TV's Good Morning America :snlnnna:o- mrta -- nt a ,ivanoftrh+innan River up views of the male and female anatomy usually seen by urologists, gynecologists and proctologists." The executive director of the Connecticut Civil Liberties Union told the Legislature's Judiciary Committee the issue was the First Amendment and censorship, and not the quality of three current "X-traordinary adult films," like The Satisfiers of Alpha Bue, Misty Beethoven, and Fiona on Fire. "It's not the work of art that matters but the idea an outsider claims the right to make the choice for us," said William Olds. "If we suppress a cheap movie today, we might suppress a work of art tomorrow." n0 performed at Second Chance but the show turned into a "near-riot" in which musicians and an audience of nearly 600 exchanged verbal insults, beer and glasses, leaving the group scrambling for cover. * 1966-Campus Vietnam protests drew public attention as the Ann Arbor Vietnam Day Committee finalized plans for its participation in the International Day of Protest, and the Voice Political Party held an unauthorized noon rally on the Diag. * 1945-Michigan mermen established themselves as the undisputed rulers of the Big Ten swimming circles hv ,I .I i