Out of control See Editorial, Page 4 C I tr Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom iEai1jj Play it again High in the mid 70s again, but a bit cloudier, Ri'n possible tonight. .. " . ... . ^_ .. : .nn TL , A .. * - ' :.1 a Vol. XCIIl, No. 27 Copyrighlt 19821, TheiMichigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 9, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages qw . Business school toet, 3 buildings By RITA GIRARDI In contrast to the budget woes felt by many University administrators and professors, it was all smiles at yesterday's groundbreaking for a massive expansion of the business school. Top University officials seized the opportunity at yesterday's ceremonies to laud the bigger, but better additions to the still-growing business school. THE $15-MILLIqN project includes the con- struction of three new buildings for the school- a new library, a computer center, and a 100-room dormitory complex for visiting scholars and executives. All of the money for the project came from private sources, mainly corporations, foun- dations, and alumni, according to business school administrators. Anne Yurik (left) and Lisa Dunn gorge themsel Construction of the three buildings is at yesterday's Wolverine Submarine Festival. scheduled to begin immediately and should be overly-long sandwich (right) stretched along completed in about two and a half years, say side of the Union for 300 feet. administrators. The business school-which is one of the few University schools that has continued to grow broth in budget and students over the past several years-started raising the money for the expan- sion about a year and a half ago, said John Ed- man, the chairman of the school's fund-raising su b sa n d w committee. Edman said the school launched a major "Capital Campaign" in April, 1981 to bring in the o p s re c o rd money. So far, Edman said, the campaign has raised $10 million of the $15 million needed to By GEORGEA KOVANIS' build the three structures. SLIGHTLY MORE than half of that $10 million Eight hundred pounds of cold cuts, .5,400 t has come from corporations, such as Upjohn, slices, plus cheeses, mayonnaise, onions, and ] Michigan Bell, and the Detroit Bank and Trust, added to a 300-foot long loaf of French bread wa Edman said yesterday. Another third of the than a sandwich for University students - it money came from grants from foundations and meal. the remaining 11 percent came from alumni con- Michigan's record-breaking submarine san tributions, he said: the "Wolverine Submarine," proved a tantalizir The Troy-based Kresge Foundation was the filling taste tempter for students yesterday. Thest cntrbuor, Krhe Fs aiproming $s hSponsored by the University Activities CentE biggest contributor, he said, promising $2.5 Michigan Union and a host of manufacturer; million to the project. The Kresge Foundation donated food and drinks, the goal was to raise $8,t has also made sizable contributions to the United Way, promote the renovation of the See CONSTRUCTION, Page 7 See WOLVERINE, I y F 4.' Poland parliament outlaws Soldaiy WARSAW, Poland (AP)- Parliament formally ended Poland's unprecedented ex- periment in worker democracy yesterday, voting overwhelmingly to ban Solidarity and take steps to stop future unions from gaining Solidarity's national power. The vote, taken by a display of hands, was broadcast on the state- run= national television. Officials said only 10 members of the 460- seat Sejm, or Parliament, voted against the new trade union law, while nine others abstained. THE MOVE came after nearly 11 months of martial law under which the Soviet bloc's only in- dependent labor union was suspended and most of its leaders were imprisoned. The military rule has been challenged by periodic riots and protests, and the vote was expected to provoke more unrest. There were no protests outside the Parliament, which was circled by police. There also was no im- mediate reaction to the vote from the Solidarity underground, hit hard by the arrest Tuesday of its leader Wladyslaw Frasyniuk. Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, the Communist Party and government chief who declared martial law last Dec. 13, applauded quietly af- ter the vote on the party-drafted law. There was little visible response from the deputies. AN INFORMED government source said Jaruzelski planned to speak today when Parliament reconvenes, and added he might "offer a few sweets." No other details were available. The report prompted speculation that the general might announce a further easing of martial law, but the government sources and other officials said Jaruzelski did not in- tend to lift military rule now. He previously has said he might do so at the end of the year. The new law allows workers the right to strike, but restricts it severely and bans walkouts in case of natural or economic emergen- cies. Police and military unions are not allowed and any labor organization deemed to be har- boring anti-government activists would be deregistered. STIFF PENALTIES are provided for those who break the rules. New unions will be based on professions and initially limited to the factory level, erasing Solidarity's immense power as a national force. Unions also would be forbidden to tack names like "Solidarity" onto their titles. Nationwide organizations would be prohibited and inter-union cen- tral boards, or federations, would be permitted only in 1984. Some Western observers say this timetable would allow the Com- munist Party to monitor union development and guard against See POLISH, Page 2 Daily Photos by JEFF SCHRIER Spartan s. look for first win. in 1982, By BOB WOJNOWSKI Looks can be deceiving. Or so hopes Michigan State head coach Muddy Waters, who brings a down-but-not-out squad of Spar- tans into Michigan Stadium this afternoon for the an- nual bash with Michigan for state bragging rights. THE SPARTANS have stumbledbthrough four straight losses to open the season but have hung tough against a rough schedule-Illinois, Ohio State, Miami (Fla.), and Notre Dame-and that gives the Michigan State third-year coach reason to believe that his team is not as bad as it might appear. "The team is not demoralized-they're just as determined as they've ever been," said Waters earlier this week. "We really believe we're going to beat Michigan this week. I know we're capable of it." Indeed, if ever the Wolverines were ripe for the picking, it is now. With Michigan off to a mediocre 2-2 start, head coach Bo Schembechler has already labeled the game, which will begin at 1 p.m., the key to the season. "If we can beat Michigan State, we'll be in the race-that's the key," he said. MICHIGAN HAS been struggling behind the incon- sistent play of junior quarterback Steve Smith and the unavailability of star flanker Anthony Carter. Carter missed most of last week's 24-10 win over In- diana with a rib bruise, but is expected to start again- sf the Spartans today. The Wolverines cannot afford to struggle offen- sively if they hope to put any points on the board against a rock-solid Spartan defense that ranks second in the Big Ten.4 "The strength of their team is the defense," said Schembechler. "It's the strongest defense we've met so far, and that includes Notre Dame." ANCHORING THE Michigan State stop troops are junior end Carl Banks, senior tackle Smiley Creswell. See MICHIGAN, Page,9 Ste inem urges change in U.S. power centers *Unemployment WASHINGTON (UPI) - Unem- A record 6.6 million with job: ployment soared to 10.1 percent in Sep- forced to take only part-time po tember, breaking the double-digit because of the economy. Anott barrier for the first time since the million were to discouraged to l Great Depression with 11.3 million a job, according to third-qt people out of work, the government figures, and were not even c reported yesterday. among the unemployed. The 10.1 percent seasonally adjusted With the Nov. 2 congressiona rate topped the 1941 rate of 9.9 percent tions only 24 days away, Dem and is the highest since the 14.6 percent seized on the new figures to c in 1940. ouster of those House and Senate BLUE-collar workers suffered the bers who backed President Re brunt of the increase. program, but Reagan refused to The Labor Department said the total blame for the high rate. number of people officially unemployed IN A BILL-signing ceremony a jumped 450,000 since August. Beach, Calif., President R highest since 194 Although women have made great progress in the past decade, they now must direct their efforts toward making a fundamental change in this country's power structure, leading femipist Glorida Steinem told a sell-out crowd last night in the Power Center. Steinem said the main issues facing feminists this decade will be the con- tinuing fight for equal opportunity in employment, for a redefinition of work and family roles, and for "reporudctive freedom," which she defined as the !right of women to decide if and when to have children, this latter right, she said, includes the right to abortions and birth control. THE FORUM was interrupted at least seven times by enthusiastic ap- plause and standing ovations from the crowd of about 1,000, most of whom were women. "We have completed the first full decade of the second wave of feminism in this country," Steinem said last night. "We have not yet begun to really change the power structure in our lives." Steinem was joined on the platform by two other feminists, Kate Millet and Alice Walker. The forum was spon- sored by Friends for Women's Credit, a feminist group founded three years ago. s were ositions her 1.6 ook for uarter ounted al elec- nocrats all for mem- agan's accept t Long eagan pledged to find jobs "for all the 10.1" percent of the labor force out of work. He chastised critics ".. . who would try to make a political football out of this cruel fate for so many people." Reagan said the legislation would create hundreds of thousands of jobs by increasing U.S. exports and services abroad. The president also said his administration has reduced "double- digit inflation, the single greatest enemy of jobs" and added that "the toughest, most urgent priority we have is to create more jobs." Noting that the rate was 7.4 percent when he took office, Reagan said, "I'm willing to accept the responsibility for the 2.7 percent increase if others accept the responsibility for the 7.4 percent." IN UNEMPLOYMENT lines across the country, workers seeking jobless benefits were mixed in fixing the blame. Some felt it was Reagan's fault, others said he should have more time. Some simply said they did not know. Analysts with the Bureau of Labor Statistics noted that joblessness curing that era of hard times involved almost exclusively male heads of households. In recent years, they said, there has beena substantial surge in the number See DOUBLE, Page 2 Steinem ... fight not over JOINING Steinem were several other women active in the women's movement, including civil rights ac- tivist Nellie Cueller, candidate for lietenant governor Martha Giffiths, an'd Helen Milliken, wife of Gov. William Milliken. See FEMINIST, Page 5 TODAY Last minute reprieve TEXAS JUDGE granted Sammy Racoon a stay of execution just 15 minutes before the state wasI to carry out a death sentence against the 6-month- nly rio~ t of na s.n ana d nla4 nA. an, , , now Bad checks check out THE MAN WHU bought Gene Autry's hometown of Tioga, Tex. for $200,000 has been arrested on charges passing a bad check, officials say. John Grice, a developer in Houston and Dallas, was arrested after police saw news reports about Grice's purchase of downtown Tioga, a once- popular health resort located about 60 miles north of Dallas. Grice-who is currently on six years' probation on fraud and larceny charges-has been sought by police since July. "I didn't know where he was until I opened the newspaper and saw he'd bought this town," Constable Walter Rankin Museum. "We have the image anyway, why fight it?" asked museum director Susannah Stuart. Althouhg the museum and the Chamber of Commerce only have $64 in their budget, they are preparing a series of Halloween events including a psychic festival, magic and juggling show, parade, costume ball, haunted house, and even a Monster Mash record dance. Salem has more to offer than its horrific past, Stuart said, "but if that's what it takes to get tourists here, why not run with it." For those who take Halloween a little more seriously, there will also be lectures and an exhibit on the "hysteria" of 1692, when colonists executed 20 women believed to be witches and imprisoned Also on this day in history: * 1909-University President James Angell delivered the annual address of welcome to the freshmen, advising the young men to "avoid the path of unrestraint" and "tem- ptation to take a sort of moral vacation." " 1950-The Selective Service announced "2-A" plans to exempt all "high-calibre" men the full time they are in school. The program required men to pass an aptitude test proving scholarly capabilities in their specific area of study. " 1964-Peace Corps Director R. Sargent Shriver spoke to University students at a mass recruiting session at the =l i