Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom .a 43, atiu DRIPPY Mostly cloudy today with a chance of showers. The high will be in the 40s. Vol. XCII, No. 131 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, March 18, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages Limits sought for access to research By BARRY WITT workingc University administrators are con- for and sidering a proposal to protect faculty proposals members' exclusive control of accepted. marketable innovations by restricting Michig public access to parts of research President documents, a research official said made the yesterday. asking for James Lesch, director of the Univer- the defens sity's Division of Research Develop- that a res ment and Administration, said he has to wide ab forwarded to Charles Overberger, vice MSA re president for research, a proposal proposal' which would allow researchers to mark investigat as confidential sections of research research( documents that include "trade secrets, ALTHO business data, or technical and scien- departme tific data" of a proprietary nature. impetus f LESCH SAID the restriction issue the reaso was raised recently after his office academic released a good .deal of material on protecti] projects sponsored by the defense patentab department. Students investigating the activities of campus researchers files on Pentagon contracts asked received copies of many the defense department had an Student Assembly Jon Feiger, among those who earlier requests and now is r more detailed information on se projects, yesterday warned triction policy could be "open use." searcher Brett Eynon said the "could be used to block any ion" of the issue of defense on campus. UGH THE release of defense ent-related materials was the for the new policy, Lesch said n for the proposal lies in the community's new interest in rg research-particularly le material-which could See NEW, Page 3 'House committee deals blow to Milliken cuts Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Fowl weather With both melted snow and frequent rains, the flooding Huron River has turned Island Park into a haven for various water-loving creatures. LANSING (UPI) - Lawmakers dealt a virtual death blow yesterday to Gov. William Milliken's $451 million executive 'budget cut, and- Budget Director Gerald Miller said anything that "gets the votes" may be part of a revised proposal. Majority. Democrats on the House Appropriations Committee voted to ad- journ their joint meeting with their Senate counterparts shortly after Miller delivered the record cut for their consideration. MILLER LATER agreed the adjour- nment was tantamount to a rejection of the $451 million cut in virtually all state spending areas. "I'm not disturbed by it," he said, noting House Republicans had said they were prepared to vote against it."I ex- pect as part of the negotiations process it will be changed. I do expect to issue another order." The executive order and a proposal to increase in the stae income tax from 4.6 percent to 5.3 percent are Milliken's plan to deal with a $567 million deficit in the state's current 1981-82 budget. MILLER SAID suggestions by lawmakers that welfare benefit reduc- tions and some form of property tax relief become part of the total program will be taken to Milliken although he is "uncomfortable" with them. The budget cut proposal, the second this fiscal year, was nearly identical to the plan Milliken suggested on statewide television last week. It in- volves cuts in state aid -to colleges, See COMMITTEE, Page 7 ntruders' By ROB FRANK When a noise in freshperson Janet Feldman's Mark- ley dorm room woke her up one December morning, she expected to see her roommate returning from an early morning exam. Instead, Feldman faced an in- truder on his way out of the room with her backpack and several other items. Early last month, an intruder tied a female resident of Baits Housing to her bed, and sexually assaulted her at knifepoint. LATER IN THE month, occupants of two rooms in Markley Hall slept undisturbed as burglars made off with cash and a tape recorder. Housing administrators and residents, worried worry dorn about the growing number of rapes, attempted rapes, and major thefts across campus, are stepping up secuity measures in and around ithe residence halls. "Most of the crimes within a dorm occur because a door has been left open," said Gerry Bradshaw, a University housing security officer. Often an in- truder enters a room intending only to steal, officials explained. If a woman is sleeping inside however, assault and sometimes rapedean and do occur. ROOMMATES OFTEN are more concerned about locking each other out than they are about the risk in- volved with open doors, according to Feldman, the victim of Markley's first reported break-in this year. "It's like camp," she said. "You think it's no big deal to leave your door open for two hours." But the residents robbery has had-tn effect on her, she said, explaining that she had nightmares about the theft, and that the sound of a door opening wakes her now. "Students have to be more willing to challenge suspicious persons and regard the halls as theirs," said Mary Antineau, South Quad's building director. Antineau has organized several programs to educate dorm residents, including presentations by security officers, self-defense workshops, and safety slide shows. "I DON'T KNOW what more you can do, unless you start playing mommy and daddy," said Kevin Doria, Markley building director. "I can't go around See HOUSING; Page 2 Activist Means urges fight for Indian rights By HARLAN KAHN American Indian activist Russell Means is still fighting for his rights as a native American, and yesterday he brought a bit of that war to the Univer- sity. Means, who spoke yesterday at Hut- chins Hall in the Law School, addressed the nation's "arrogance of human rights," as part of a two day seminar sponsored by the American Indian Law Students Association. MEANS SAID he ,wants freedom from exploitation and manipulation for all people, but only in the context of natural rights. There are three types of rights, Means explained, human, civil, See INDIAN, Page 3 Ton Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Top Wthe morntn . This line formed yesterday morning outside Dooley's bar on Thompson Street. Patrons gathered at 6 a.m. in an effort to get an early start on the annual St. Patrick's Day celebrations. Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON INDIAN RIGHTS advocate Russell Means discusses the problems of minorities yesterday in Hutchins Hall. TODAY- Killer Bunnies!? CHARLES BORDIN looked deep into the hearts and minds of rabbits and what he found fills a book of humor from the dark side of the hutch. -m Bordin is the illustrator of a book called "Killer for broccoli and will go to any lengths to get their little mitts on some. They are even shown dropping slugs into a "Broc- o-vend" machine. Bordin's book is devoid of politics but in interviews he readily admits to a belief in a "bunny con- spiracy" theory of history. Police protection Julie Jones and her husband Leigh of Plymouth, England, left for their honeymoon yesterday, followed by Monkeyshines Brookfield Zoo in Illinois is having problems with their primate residents. Sampson, a 450-pound gorilla on loan to Brookfield Zoo from Buffalo, N.Y., attempted to swat a small female talapoin monkey. The attack forced the smaller monkey to jump into a frigid pool in the zoo's new primate exhibit area to escape. A zoo worker was lowered into the pool by a rope to rescue the monkey named Abbie. Joyce Gardella, a zoo spokeswoman, said the monkeys must learn to live together neacefullv-an art none have vet Also on this date: 1966-Several University faculty members agreed to act as cosp~msors of the newly-formed campus chapter of the W.E.B. DuBois Club. The Justice Department recently had added the organization to its list of "subversive groups," 1974-Assistant to the Vice President for Academic Af fairs Charles Allmand issued a set of guidelines for Univer- sity personnel supervisors with regard to the Graduate Employees Organization elections. The guidelines authorized supervisors to prohibit employes from engaging in organizing during working hours and encouraged them to '1 i