Polish strikes See Editorial, Page 4 Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom 4IaiIQ Corky Today will be cloudy with a high in the 60s and a modest chance of rain. i W Vol. XCIII, No. 30 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 13, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages, Riot police clash with *workers stri ing in Poland From AP and UPI WARSAW, Poland- Angry workers fought riot police in Gdansk and mar- ched on Communist Party headquar- ters in the Baltic port yesterday after an estimated 10,000 shipyard workers struck for the second day to protest the ban on Solidarity, witnesses said. They said police dispersed about 1,000 people who had rallied outside the shipyard, then fired tear gas, water cannon and smoke bombs when the crowd regrouped and surged toward *the par.ty headquarters. It was the second night of rioting in Gdansk. SOME WORKERS leaving the shipyard told reporters they had been dismissed for going on strike, and that Student govt plans protests of budget cuts By ROB FRANK Student government leaders say they are planning the first well-organized student resistance to University budget plans and will unleash their offensive at tomorrow's Regents' meeting. A student rally outside the Ad- ministration Building tomorrow will be the beginning, organizers say, of a comprehensive movement against ad- ministrators' plans to reorder the' University's budget. MEMBERS OF the Michigan Student Assembly - a major force behind the planned protests - met last night to lay out their strategies for combatting ad- ministrator's plans. Students have rallied occasionally in, the past against the administration's "smaller but better" budget plans, but planners of tomorrow's rally insist it is only the beginning of an ongoing protest. Already preparing for the rally, MSA members have spent the week collecting signatures on petitions questioning the University's - budget plans, in which some programs are cut back to give more money to others. Student gover- nment leaders said yesterday the petitioning was planned to alert studeri- ts to problems in the budget and to the upcoming protests against it. BESIDES rallying on Regents Plaza tomorrow, students say they hope to pack the Regents' meeting with speakers opposed to current budget plans. Julie Gittleman, an MSA vice See STUDENTS, Page 2 Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON University's proposed budget at last night's Michigan Student Assembly members lay out plans for combatting the meeting. See POLICE, Page 2 r 'U, OBy JIM SPARK officers plan record budget S Despite persistent worries about cutbacks, Univer- sity administrators this week unveil a record-, breaking budget to the Regents. The University's General Fund budget, which Regents will be asked to approve at their meeting tomorrow, is $20.1 million bigger than last year, totaling a record $282,480,000. MOST OF that new money came from this year's 15-percent tuition hike, which alone will add $12.7 million to University coffers. The budget also was 0.upped $1 million when an anticipated enrollment drop of 800 students failed to materialize, and enrollment fell by only 364 students. The proposed budget includes a controversial plan to boost the salaries of University faculty and staff members. The budget calls for an extra $5 million in raises to be shared by the University's 2,600 faculty members, while its 13,000 stafftworkers would split up $2 million. The merit-based pay plan has angered many University secretaries and clerks, who claim that they should receive raises proportionate to those given to professors. BUT VICE President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye, who authored the plan, said there is no room in this "stringent" budget for larger pay boosts for staff members. He pointed out that the $136,236,000 the state gave the University this year is actually $1.5 million less than expected. University officials also insisted that the $20.1 million increase in the budget this year is deceiving. They .say the budget is not really that much larger, but that it appears so because some money-mainly $3 million in Health Service fees-is included in the budget this year for the first time. Action on the University's budget, which is usually approved in September, was delayed until this month because the exact amount of state appropriations was not know at the time of last month's Regents' meeting. Late last month, the state legislature approved a 5 percent increase in appropriations to the University, but that just barely offset a $7.3-million cut in last year's appropriation. - See 'U', Page 3 Bomb threat in Grad a hoax By BARRY WITT A bomb threat forced about 50 em- ployees at the Graduate Library to evacuate yesterday morning after the University's security department received a note saying a bomb had been placed in the building's basement. The Ann Arbor Police Department's bomb squad was called in to inspect a suspicious box, but no explosive was found, police said. AT ABOUT 9 a.m. an unidentified man handed a folded note containing the bomb threat to a University public safety officer outside the safety depar- tment's offices at 525 Church St., a security official said. By the time the officer opened and read the note, the man had fled, said Walter Stevens, University safety director. The note said a bomb was in a box in the library's east side basement mail room, according to Stevens. After University security and Ann Arbor Police officers discovered a box in the described location, the bomb squad was brought in and employees in two lower level library basements were evacuated, Stevens said. The employees were allowed back in- to their offices by 11 a.m.. The officer who received the note described thehman as a 25-30 year old caucasian with a mustache. I I Jon Cosovich, to be appointed the University's new chief fundraiser, said he sees "potential for growth in atmost every fundraising area." Cosovich is formerly a Stanford University official. legents to approve aew chief fundraiser year was unacceptable to the University's top administrators, It took more than a year and a half said Susan Lipschutz, an assistant to to find him, but the University Shapiro. Politically speaking Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) listens in on a conversation between gubernatorial candidate James Blanchard (left) and candidate for Wayne County Executive, William Lucas, at a campaign luncheon in Detroit's Cobo Hall. Japan'spri-me minister to retire 1 From AP and UPI TOKYO - Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki, his re-election next month vir- tually assured, bowed yesterday to mounting criticism of his economic *policies and announced he would not seek a second term. The 71-year-old politician, dubbed "Suzuki Who" by the Japanese press when he rose to power in 1980 from relative obscurity, summoned top leaders of his ruling Liberal- Democratic Party to his office to an- nounce his decision. NO CHANGE is expected in the government's foreign policy. Nor is any change expected in the long-term economic policy of promoting exports and restricting imports. Senior party leaders are scheduled to meet tomorow to discuss choosing the next party president. In Japan's parliamentary system of government, the president of the majority party is assured of being elected prime minister by Parliament. Suzuki had been assured of re- election at the November caucus. But his approval rating with the public had dropped to only 16 percent in one recent opinion poll because of his gover- nment's failure to lift the economy out of a recession. IN THE PAST month he was openly attacked by two LDP faction leaders, former prime ministers Takeo Miki and Takeo Fukuda, a sign of strife in a par- ty that prefers to keep its disputes private. See SUZUKI, Page 2 finally has a new chief fundraiser. The Regents will be asked tomorrow to approve Jon Cosovich, now an official at Stanford Univer- sity, as vice president for University relations and development. Cosovich, 47, fills the spot vacated by former University Vice President Michael Radock, who announced his resignation in January, 1981. UNIVERSITY President Harold Shapiro assigned a search commit- tee to find a replacement for Radock soon after the former vice president's announcement. But the list of names that panel handed the administration late last Early this year, Shapiro himself took over the search process, and Cosovich was approached for the job only last February. LIPSCHUTZ attributed the ad- ministration's difficulty in finding a replacement to a professional field that "just isn't full of qualified people." Cosovich was chosen from a list of four or five candidates who visited campus this past summer, Lip- schutz said. Once in Ann Arbor, they met with the original search com- mittee members and other ad- ministrators. See COSOVICH, Page 3 TODAY- Hot tub schooling AHOT TUB SPA that 13 ministers would like to see barred from College Park, Maryland would instead be an asset, its promoter said on Monday. "The church leaders don't have a thing to worry about," said Dennis Finchan, general manager of the spa, / majority of the councilmen oppose sanctions against the spa, adding, "I don't think we're going to be able to block it." Wood said he objects to the firm's advertising pam- phlets that stress "complete privacy" and "locked rooms." "I'm 31 and not stupid," Wood said. "It wasn't so long ago that I was in college, so I know what's going on. Unless they've got strong moral principles, college students have strong sex drives and if you make it easier for them to in- dulge in sexual activity, they will." O RcaWPr lif 1 ghnnt i then, he said, two bales of marijuana wrapped in plastic floated by. The two men floated on th'e bales for another day until they were rescued by a passing fishing boat off the Florida Keys. Coast Guard officials and boat captains said that this story is possible because marijuana bales are periodically thrown overboard by smugglers near the Florida Keys.0 Th a oily, a im anea " 1951-approximately four cases of empty beer bottles were stolen from a University greenhouse in Nichols Ar- boretum, according to Superintendent of the Arboretum, C.J. Moody. The robbery, presumably committed in order to claim deposits on the bottles, is only a drop in the bucket compared to the "two or three truckloads" of bottles taken out every Monday morning by University employees. " 1940-All-American Tom Harmon led the Michigan Wolverines to a 26-0 victory over the Crimson before a crowd of 30,000 in historic Harvard Stadium. =I