ST. LOUIS I S WORLD ~ERIE~ See Sports, 5 Page 10 Localized What?! disasterISnow flurries or rain will be falling disasterJ[from mostly cloudy skies today as SeemEditorial, Page4temperatures dip to mid 40s. It's SWbeginning to look a lot like... Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. XCIII, No. 37 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 21, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages City tries to ofset poverty fund cuts By KRISTIN STAPLETON "Human misery" is on the rise in Ann Arbor, according to a survey of human services programs in 55 cities across the country. It's on the rise because federal and state money for the city's poverty programs has been cut drastically - by as much as 35 per- cent, according to the Ann Arbor Community Development Department. As a result, the public has put increasing pressure on the city government to step in and help the poor. THE FEDERAL Community Development Block Grant program was reduced by $200,000. Although the city's Comprehensive Em- ployment Training Act (renamed the Ann Ar- bor Employment and Training Center) has been promised the same amount of money as it received last year, the effects of inflation will cut the number of people who can be aided by the program. As these budget cuts are taking money away from human services, the rate of unem- ployment is growing and more people are sub- sisting at or below the poverty level, according to a report put together by the Ann Arbor Poverty Committee. Now, local council members feel they have to act on the poverty problem. The decision of the Ann Arbor City Council last week to allocate $5,000 to emergency hunger relief may seem like a relatively in- significant action in the face of these extensive cuts. To some, however, it marks the begin- ning of a new sense of local responsibility to alleviate the problems of, poverty - a respon- sibility which used 'to belong to the federal government. Councilmember Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward) described this responsibility at the Council meeting during which the hunger. resolution was first proposed. "Over the last year," she said, "I've seen something happen in this community. I've seen a gradual emergence of the consciousness of a local responsibility for a local problem." MOST OF THE other members agree that the city has a responsibility to insure that its residents have food, clothing, and shelter. The main points of contention within the Council are now questions of extent and permanence: How much city money should be allocated for poverty relief, and if that money should be in- cluded as an item in each year's budget. Dissension on these issues is split along par- ty lines. Mayor Louis Belcher expressed the Republican view by calling city money a "safety net" to be used when all other sources of aid provide inadequate relief. "What the City of Ann Arbor eventually does (to relieve poverty) should be considered a catalyst for the community to attack the problems ... not as the agent to deliver those services," Belcher said. BELCHER SAID the city should encourage the private sector to participate more in relief programs, such as the United Way. Democrats on the Council agree with the "catalyst" idea. They say they also feel, however, that the city itself should set aside a substantial amount of funds to be used for poverty relief. Lowell Peterson, (D-First Ward) said, "We've got to start to allocate money for these problems on a more permanent basis." RAFAEL EZEKIEL (D-Third Ward) proposed that Council set up a Community Development Fund to be administered by the Community Development Department. The CDD would determine, based on input -by poverty task forces, which needs are greatest and how much money should be devoted to them, The Republicans oppose that proposal. they say it would be unwise to devote a specific See CITY, Page 6 Police doubt suspects are Tylenol killers From AP and UPI CHICAGO- New York City in- vestigators yesterday cast doubt the man pictured in a Sept. 29. drugstore security photo was James Lewis, con- sidered the prime suspect in the cyanide-Tylenol murders of seven Chicago-area people. Lewis, it was found, lived with his wife in a cheap Manhattan hotel for six weeks, including the period when seven people died from cyanide-poisoned cap- sules, authorities said yesterday. A SPECIAL squad of 100 FBI agents and New York police officers were searching the city in hopes the couple might still be there, FBI agent Kenneth Walton told reporters at a news con- ference. Walton said that Leann Lewis, 35, had signed the couple into the Rutledge Hotel on Sept. 6 and was last seen there Oct. 16. Lewis, 36, was last seen at the hotel on Oct. 14. All seven cyanide victims in Chicago swallowed the tainted capsules on Sept. 29. "WE DON'T think they were traveling back and forth to Chicago during that period of time," Chief of ' Detectives James Sullivan said. Sullivan said Mrs. Lewis worked regularly as a bookkeeper in Manhat- tan and neighbors had seen her husband walking her home after work. "We have no evidence that directly connects the Lewises to the Tylenol murders," Walton emphasized. "No evidence. No evidence." ASKED WHY the FBI had called a news conference to discuss-the couple's stay at the Rutledge, Sullivan replied, "Because it may lead to something bigger:" Lewis has been charged with attem- pted extortion for writing a letter to McNeil Consumer Products Co., the manufacturer of Tylenol, demanding $1 million to prevent -future poisonings. Lewis' fingerprint was found on the let- ter, which was mailed from New York City. He is also wanted for questioning in the slayings themselves. Investigators were hopeful they had gotten a major break in the baffling mystery earlier this week. It came when a Walgreen Drug store security photo taken Sept. 29 was released. It showed a man bearing a striking See EVIDENCE, Page 6 No kidding Construction of the new business school library brings with it some unsightly in- conveniences. Probably the most noticeable one being the remainders of Tappan St. between Martha Cook and the law school which is being torn up for a new Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS sewer. It's a good thing the sign is placed there for those motorists who might have difficulty noticing this enormous pile of asphalt chunks. Cleaver changes his tune In speech By GREG BRUSSTAR It may seem odd to some people, but Eldridge Cleaver, former leader of the radical Black Panther Party, voiced his support of the Reagan administration and blasted world communism yester- day in a speech at the Michigan Union. Cleaver's views have undergone a drastic change since his days as leader of the now famous Black Panthers. That change was so startlingly ap- See HEY, Page 2, Bu limia: An epidemic on campus By KRISTIN STAPLETON In what some call an epidemic, more and more college-age women - possibly as many as one in thr-ee - are developing bulimia, a condition that makes them eat excessively, and then force themselves to vomit. This binging and purging does not usually affect an individual's ap- pearance, according to Kenneth Castagna, director of the University Hospital's bulimia program. But the, potential psychological and physical damage is enormous, he said. BULIMIA IS similar to anorexia ner- vosa, another eating disorder, in that it primarily affects women and is usually brought on by a fear of being overweight. But while anorexics deny their condition, bulimics know their eating patterns are abnormal, Castagna said. Many bulimics turn to food as a support in times of depression or anxiety, he said. "Food is used as a replacement for love." After the binge, he explained, bulimics feel guilty and afraid of becoming overweight, so they induce vomiting or use laxatives. They end up with "tremendous feelings of guilt and disgust over what they've done," Castagna said. And, because a bulimic may induce vomiting between several times in a week and 10 times in a single day, he said, "the purging side of it is going to take its toll physically." Induced vomiting can result in sore throats, dehydration, ruptured stomach linings, rotten teeth, low potassium and sodium counts, and possibly convulsions leading to death, he said. BULIMIA usually develops in the fir- st years of college, according to Castagna, because separation from the family can be especially traumatic. An Ohio State Univesity study in 1981 revealed that between 20 and 30 percent of the women on that campus suffer the condition. Jane, (not her real name), a Univer- sity student who has been a bulimic for several years, said there are other ways that being in college can lead to the eating disorder. "So much of socializing in college is eating, but you have to be slim, too. The answer is bulimia," she said. "You can have your cake and eat it, too, literally, and not get fat," she ex- plained. And, she said, although she is" disgusted by the binge/purge cycle, in a contest between "gross" and "vanity," vanity wins out. ADDING TO the problem, she said, is the false impression many women have that the condition is not serious enough to warrant treatment. "You don't think~ you deserve the, help. You think it's your problem," she said, "but it's not." According to Castagna, this is the chief hindrance to treating bulimia. "Many women do this for years and think they are the only ones who do it, so they don't come in," he said. An ex-bulimic agrees. When she told several friends about her problem, she found out that half of them were bulimics, too. She said they used food "to escape from things-you don't know how to deal with in the world." Bulimia is a warning sign that a person should seek help with problems in relation- ships and other aspects of personal life, she said. CASTAGNA stressed that, See BULIMIA, Page 5 Cleaver Reagan's way is right IODAY Power steering UNIVERSITY of Michigan Regent Sarah Goddard Power will be steering in a new direction in the future. Power recently was elected the big wheel, er, director of the 1.28 million member along with the van's cargo-4,000 clean cotton diapers. Ken Peterson, a driver for the Dy-Dee diaper service, had stop- ped at a home to make a delivery about 9 a.m. and "as he started back to the street, the van was pulling away," said Police Chief Robert Ferber of suburban Grosse Pointe Farms. Dy-Dee sales manager Russ Smith said he and other employees notified police and began searching for the van, which was found intact in Detroit-minus the clean diapers. Evidence inside the recovered van indicated it may have been used during a home burglary, Detroit police said. and the dianers annarentIv were ditched shorty aftea often tops $2,550 a week. "We've got no comment on this," a Buckingham Palace spokeswoman said. "It's a personal matter for the princess. We have no idea how many clothes she may have bought." The princess, who was voted the best-dressed woman in Britain in a recent magazine poll, is a trend-setter in fashion. The Sun said her ball gowns cost the equivalent of about $1,700 on the average, her cocktail dresses more than $468 and her day dresses around $350, each outfit accompanied by matching shoes, hat and han- dbag. E The Daily almanac O N THIS DATE in 1932, President Hoover spoke in Olympia Stadium in Detroit seeking re-election support. Also on this date: *1955-Wolverines defended the "Little Brown Jug, against Minnesota. " 1966-Regents OKed revision of Vice President for Student Affairs Richard Cutler's role. He was given all I i