The Daily S TV Listings Insidepge 'U' Businglf Sce Eduer(wi, Page E Ninety-Three Years of Editorial Freedom BIaiIg ,Mis , wis '; , ,vkr Vol. XCIII, No. 6 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, September 15, 1982 Ten Cents Eight Pages 'Students gain in housing race By FANNIE WEINSTEIN Not long ago, many students com- plained they were at the mercy of evil campus landlords, but now it's the students who have the upper hand in the Ann Arbor housing market, say Univer- sity housing advisers. In fact, some lan- dlords are so desperate to rent their apartments, they were offering everything from scholarships to TV sets to anyone who'll fill their vacancies. Probably the biggest reason the city's housing vacancy rate has soared from 0.5 percent to 13.7 percent in just the past, few yers is that students are less picky than beforewhen choosing their homes. MORE SO than in past years, students seem willing to'live farther from campus, with more people, and in smaller apar- tments, according to University housing official Jo Rumsey. Above all, she said, students are looking for cheaper homes. Landlords who used to charge high rents to students who wanted to live in TAs 'to vote on new contract 'with 'U' By GEORGE ADAMS Graduate teaching assistants will be asked tomorrow to vote on the contract that will set their salaries for the coming three years. If they agree to the contract, it will be their first since 1976, when their last one expired. Leaders of the TAs' union, the Graduate Employees Organization (GEO), said they are very confident that the TAs will OK the proposed con- tract when the mail ballots are tallied in the middle of next month. IF THE agreement is approved, it will signal a significant turning point in more than five years of bitter conflicts between GEO leaders and Universit'y officials. When voting through the mail this month, TAs will have the opportunity only to accept the proposed contract as Wit is written or to reject it entirely, ex- plained GEO official Paul Harris. "The University has no intention of reopening negotiations for a discrepan- cy over one article or some minor point," he said. "It (the contract) will be voted on as a package, and I expect - it will be ratified." According to the proposed contract: " Salaries for TAs will go up at least 5.8 percent, bringing base pay for assistants to $6,305 annually. Assistants in some departments will receive even higher pay raises. " Salaries for library assistants will be set at $3,770, a 6.8 percent rise. " Until the contract expires in October, 1985, wages for graduate student assistants will continue to rise by 30 percent of faculty salary increases. " All University departments would have to provide at least 13 hours of training to new TAs and would have to allow TAs to help in "the educational planning for the course that they are assigned to assist." * Tuition for graduate student assistan- ts would be set at no more than two- thirds of in-state tuition levels. Current tuition grants would be dropped. See TAS, Page 3 larger apartments close to campus are finding it increasingly difficult to find tenants willing to pay the price. "Students are looking at a lot more things," said Rumsey. "They're not taking the first things that they see." For one thing, she said, students are willing to make a longer walk to classes each day or even drive in return for a cheaper home. For another, they're more willing to share a bedroom, she said. ANOTHER reason why the traditional rush for campus housing bottomed out is that many students, still uncertain about their budgets, had to wait until this fall - after their financial aid was decided - to look for homes, Rumsey added. Landlords are using a number of solutions to combat the high number of vacancies, Rumsey said. Those who were left with large houses vacant began renting them in single-room units, tur- ning the homes into boarding houses. Others, she said, have been shortening leases and cutting security deposits. "I think the landlords might be more inclined to negotiate an eight-month lease," Rumsey said. In the past, students have been forced to sign 12- month leases and have to sublet their apartments during the summer, usually at a significant loss. IN ADDITION, instead of having to pay a 25 to 30 percent rent premium for an eight-month lease, some landlords may be willing to go down to 15 percent. Those students who have rented units farther away from campus have done so for a number of reasons, Rumsey said. The benefits include shorter leases, security deposits which are only a frac- tion of those for local off-campus housing, and lower rents, she said. "People seem to be more interested in those than they have been in years past. Those people out there are showing gim- micks," R1umsey said. See STUDENTS, Page 3 Lebanese leader killed in Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Teach our kids- Cynthia Kehrins (left) and Amanda Simons were among a group of Detroit parents who gathered at the Detroit Public School Center to protest the lack of classes during teacher contract negotiations. Princess Grace dies MONTE CARLO, Monaco (AP)- Princess Grace, the Oscar-winning American actress who gave up Hollywood stardom for a dashing prin- ce and his tiny realm, died last night of injuries suffered in a car crash. Monaco's palace did not specify whether Prince Rainier was at his wife's side when she died of a cerebral hemorrhage, but said he had kept a bedside vigil since the princess was hospitalized Monday. THE FORMER Grace Kelly, 52, was trapped inside her car Monday when it plunged 120 feet off a treacherous mountain road and burst into flames. She was driving with her youngest child, Princess Stephanie, 17, who remained hospitalized yesterday "for observation," the palace said. Word of her death shocked the municipality on a rocky slice of the French Riviera and stunned movie fans, who never stopped loving her even after she left them. The gilded Art Nouveau casino, which first put Monaco on the map, closed its doors and switched off its floodlights, as did the famous Cafe de Paris and Hotel de Paris on Casino square. "We are all still in a state of shock," a palace spokesman said shortly after the tragic news was announced. He said it was too early to talk of funeral arrangements. THE PALACE had given no clue that Princess Grace was near death. Sour- ces had described her condition as "stationary" yesterday afternoon. On Monday, the palace had said Grace suffered only a broken right leg in the accident near the French town of La Turbie. There had been unconfir- med reports that Grace suffered two broken ribs and a fractured collarbone. Police quoted by a French news agency said neither Grace nor Stephanie was wearing a seatbelt when the accident occurred. The palace said Grace was driving, but there were unconfirmed reports that Stephanie was at the wheel. BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - Lebanese President-elect Beshir Gemayel was assassinated yesterday in a bomb explosion that demolished his Phalange Party headquarters and plunged Lebanon into a constitutional crisis. At least eight people, including other senior Phalange officials, were killed in the explosion, which carried a force equivalent to nearly a quarter ton of TNT. No one claimed responsibility for the blast. PRIME Minister Chefik Wazzan early yesterday confirmed Gemayel had been killed and called the assassination "a link in a chain of criminal con- spiracies against Lebanon at a time when it started to restore its strength." GOVERNMENT sources said the 34-year-old Christian leader, scheduled to be sworn in as president Sept. 23, died about six hours after the blast out- side the east Beirut building where he was meeting senior officials of his par- ty. They said Gemayel's body was iden- tified by a ring he was wearing. IN TEL - AVIV, Israeli officials ex- pressed sorrow and condemned the assassination. The officials refrained from speculation on who might be responsible for the attack, saying it was too early, but they said they hoped the Lebanese people would overcome "this continued reliance on violence." A former commander of Lebanon's feared Christian Phalangist militia and a figure closely identified with Israel, Gemayel is bitterly resented by Lebanon's Moslem community. His assassination was a clear challenge blast Gemavel ... killed in blast to Lebanon's bid to restore stability and came amid reports of ominous tank movements in eastern Lebanoi following punishing Israeli air strikes Monday against Syrian and Palestinain forces. THE LEFTIST As Safir newspaper said three Syrian armored brigades moved into the Bekaa Valley from Syria and Israel reportedly sent 55 tanks up to the front lines in what ap- See LEBANESE, Page 2 Princess Grace ... suffers hemorrhage To DAY Record-breaking week EOPLE SEEKING fame and fortune should travel to Klagenfurt, Austria this week for a chance to be in the Guiness Book of World Records. Tourism officials in the European town, w o are holding "Guiness Week nf Recnrds." are honing Wagner, governor of the Carinthia province, set a record of his own Sunday, by giving the shortest speech ever delivered by a politician. "Opened," he declared to inaugurate the festival week. Beef cake business booming THE COLLEGIATE beefcake calendar business has blossomed all the way to the east coast. where a Out of circulation ORRY TO disappoint you marriage proposals. Federal Budget Director David Stockman says he plans to ax him- self from the Reagan administration's list of most eligible bachelors. Stockman, 35, told the Benton Harbor Herald- Palladium he will marry 27-year-old Jennifer Blei in February. Miss Blei, who lives in Washington, D.C., is an employee of IBM Corp. She accompanied Stockman on Saturday at "Welcome Home Dave Stockman" festivities in the St. Joseph area, where her future husband grew up. Stnman Qi thea h wnhn rhtcifnr hniit three voerc SThe Also on this day in history: " 1957-plans were drawn up for construction of the School of Music building and the Cyclotron-Synchrotron of the engineering college. " 1961-University of Michigan enrollment was 24,500, and the first session of Nursing 100 met at 3 p.m. in the Nat. Sci. Aud. " 1977-Reinstatement of the Night Owl bus service which had been discontinued in April of '77 because of a decline in ridership. I