Student fast shows concern for world hunger The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 18, 1982-Page 5 Official sees problems with state budget plan By EVA SCHERER One hundred University students and the members of three more University organizations will fast today to do their small part in the fight to stop world hunger. Members of the three campus organizations-the Intercooperative Council, the Interfaith Council for Peace, and the American Friends Ser- vice Committee-say it is possible to alleviate world hunger, and add that they will do their best to raise student awareness of the problem: BUT THEIR best is a bit disappoin- ting, considering that today is America's Fast for a World Harvest day, when thousands of people across the country will give up their break- fasts, lunches, and dinners. These con- cerned Americans will then donate the money saved on the meals to Oxam, an international agency that aids third world nations in their struggles to educate and feed their people. So far, the University does not look like the place most sympathetic toward third world hunger concerns. The School of Natural Resources- the University's sponsor of today's fast-sent flyers telling people about the fast to 100 campus organizations, but only three responded. At last night's lecture on solutions to the world's hunger problem only 24 students showed up. BUT THE somewhat poor turnout did not phase the ardent supporters who did attend. "Students in the '80s are feeling more concern and realizing that the condition of the world effects their future," said Barbara Fuller, of the In- terfaith Council. Martha Rummel, a member of the Committee Concerned for World Hunger, said "It is not true that we have too many people and too little food." On the contrary, Rummel stated, the world has more than enough food to feed all of its inhabitants. Fuller, who was the main speaker at yesterday's meeting in the School of Public Health's main auditorium, agreed. LANSING (UPI)- Budget Director Gerald Miller admitted yesterday this year's spending plan already is out of whack and said he is willing to consider quick action to balance it, but would prefer to wait. Rep. Gary Owen, next year's speaker of the House, indicated he would prefer to have the problem solved before Gov.- elect James Blanchard takes office Jan. 1. "WE WILL try to get Jim Blanchard started with a balanced budget," said Owen shortly after his formal selection as speaker. "We're hoping to have as many of those problems eliminated as we can." Miller's comments to the House Taxation Committee and the State Of- ficers Compensation Commission con- stituted the first clear admission by the administration that budget "adjust- ments"-tax hikes or spending reduc- tions-cannot now be avoided. The budget year began Oct. 1. "If the economy continues at the level it is now, the shortfall will be substan- tial," he said. Miller later said a deficit as high as $400 million is possible, but unlikely. MILLER IS predicting an economic upturn, but said there are "scenarios" emerging now that "could make 1983 again a very weak year." Consumer confidence, Miller said, is the key to economic recovery. "The consumer is now feeling 'I'm the next guy who is going to get laid off,' "he said. Keat Crislr Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Troop leader denies part. in Beirut killings Former world lightweight boxing champion Hilmer Kenty watches last night's boxing cardfrom the Crisler Arena seats. Kenty and middleweight Mickey Goodwin, the card's main attraction, once were teammates at Detroit's Kronk Recreation Center. The ex-champion drew a crowd of autograph seekers throughout the evening. Teen arrested in Caltech equipment thefts PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)- A teenage science buff was arrested for, stealing $100,000 worth of computers, chemicals, a laser and other technical equipment from Caltech to set up a laboratory in his bathroom, police said yesterday. The 16-year-old boy allegedly took the "incredible potpourri of material"-also including gas masks, lab coats, radios and typewriters- from the well known university during day and night raids over a period of several months. "ACCORDING TO the kid, he's in- terested in science projects," Lt. Roger Kelley said. "When officers went to his house he was attempting to program a computer. We don't know if he knew what he was doing, butl interested in science." he said he was The youth, whose name was not released because of his age, was arrested Tuesday after police ap- prehended two other boys stealing equipment from Caltech during the weekend. The suspects had master keys to several laboratories and told police they obtained them from the 16- year-old. When officers went to the youth's home in nearby Altadena to ask him about the key, they saw the - stolen equipment, Kelley said. The boy told police he had found the key in a door at Caltech. DETECTIVE Walter Brush said of- ficers found "a whole laboratory set up in the bathroom . . . There were some bottles of toxic gases, maybe flam- mable ones." Police removed three truckloads of goods from the boy's home, where he lived with his mother, and turned over chemicals to the county's toxic waste disposal unit for tests. Caltech spokesman Dennis Meredith said the chemicals were types com- monly used in research such as ether and ammonia. KELLEY said the youth was often able to cart off the stolen equipment during the day without being observed because students frequently carry por- table computers and lab equipment on campus. "Remember, these are not large computers - they're about the size of typewriters and don't weight much," Kelley said. The motive for the burglaries seemed to be a passion for science. "He told officers he doesn't par- ticularly like school but loves science," Kelley said. "He did say he was trying to get into Caltech's Saturday morning science program offered to exceptional students." The boy, who was released to his father's custody, faces burglary charges, Kelley said. JERUSALEM (AP) - Maj. Saad Haddad, the leader of Israeli-backed forces in southern Lebanon, denied yesterday that his men had any part in the massacre of Palestinians in Beirut. Appearing in army fatigues before an Israeli judicial commission of inquiry and speaking in halting English, Had- dad said his forces abided by an agreement with Israel to stay out of Beirut. He said his men remained south of the Awali River, 20 miles from the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps, scene of the Sept. 16-18 massacre. HADDAD'S forces, who control a semi-independent enclave along the Israeli border which he calls "Free Lebanon," were accused by some sur- vivors of participating in the killings. Others blamed Christian militiamen based in Beirut. Haddad's troops have Christian officers, but many of them are Shiite Moslems. In Beirut, leaders of the Christian Phalange militia have denied Israeli statements that it was Phalangists who entered the Israeli-surrounded camps and killed hundreds of Palestinian men, women and children. Haddad told the commission: "I am 100 percent sure no soldier of the army of Free Lebanon crossed the Awali River toward the north." ASKED WHY he thought his men were blamed, Haddad charged Lebanese Moslem leader Saeb Salaam with covering up for Christian Phalangists on orcers from Saudi Arabia. HERPES... Suppressed Information Booklet of UCLA research. Eight year study of dramatic, natural therapy with 85-90% positive results. Find out what the drug companies don't want you to see. Booklet: $6.95 Natural Research Center 285 Crystal Lake Road Middletown, CT 06457 Suite 105 For additional info send $1.00- UAC cancels V (Continued from Page 1) Michael Brooks, director of the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, and Steve Belkin of the Union of Students for Israel, both of whom were familiar with Kahane's beliefs, were at Tuesday night's meeting to argue against UAC giving the rabbi a forum. BOTH BELKIN and Brooks explained that while they were not opposed to Kahane's right to free speech, they thought'it inappropriate for a University organization to provide him with a public platform. Most members of UAC's committee agreed. "We did not feel proper having someone who professes violence to speak on our behalf. Violence is not a solution," said George Stone, a committee member. "We found out Rabbi Kahane is really a proponent of violence," said Mike Jarema, another committee member. "That really goes against UAC's grain." GALLEBERG said, however, that he did not believe UAC was censoring the rabbi. iewpoint speech by radical rabbi 'We did not feel proper who having someone professes violence to speak on our behalf. Violence is not a solution.' -George Stone UAC committee member "We are not denying Rabbi Kahane the right to speak on campus. We are saying that he will not speak under UAC," Galleberg said. Marc Gilman, who handles UAC's financing on such speeches, agreed. "It's more a question of is this a benefit to the organization," he said. "Basically, I think the whole issue is someone who advocates violence," said Felice Oper, chairman of UAC's Homecoming Committee. "We're not keeping him from coming here, we're just not sponsoring him.' Ron Glassman, who said he is a fan of Kahane and helped organize his lecture with UAC, maintains that the American press distorted the rabbi's position on the Palestinian refugees. Glassman said he too feels that UAC's cancellation of the lecture is not censor- ship. "I don't think what they're doing is censorship," he said. "What they did was. probably unjustified and an overreaction, though." It is not clear whether Kahane will receive the full $300 UAC promised him for the lecture. "We're not sure of our liabilities," said Gilman, explaining that UAC has no written contract with Kahane. UAC is funded by 50 cents taken from every student's tuition, according to the organization's president. Earn 8 Credits This Spring in NEW HAMPSHIRE THE NEW ENGLAND LITERATURE PROGRAM MASS MEETING & SLIDE SHOW THURS., NOV. 18 8 P.m. AUDITORIUM D ANGELL HALL for more information PROF. WALTER CLARK Dept. of English 761-9579 I I Regents to meet on state aid, closing ISMRRD (Continued from Page 1) amount that the University would con- tribute to the center, but the Univer- sity's executive officers and the Budget Priorities Committee have agreed that up to $250,000 should be taken from the General Fund to get the center started. If the plan is approved, the center also will take control of a $750,000 trust fund awarded to the molecular biology faculty early in 1981, to be spent over five years. TUESDAY night, the Michigan Student Assembly endorsed the idea behind the center, but opposed allocating new funds to it. MSA President Amy Moore said the General Fund allocation "represented a verv strong shift of priorities, by pulling $250,000 out of the General Fund at the expense of the units they were reviewing." MSA also criticized the center's proposed task of forming research "partnerships" with private industry. "As the University faces financial problems, we are placed in a very precarious position, because we could very likely become beholden to cor- porations," Moore said. At the other end of the ad- ministration's priority list lies the In- stitute for the Study of Mental Retar- dation and Related Disabilities. The Regents will be asked today to close the institute, ending a frequently stormy review process and saving the University an estimated $290,000. ISMRRD staff members have charged that the budget review report had many factual errors, and that ad- ministrators and the Budget Priorities Committee were not responsive to ef- forts to correct those errors. They also have claimed the decision to eliminate ISMRRD was made long before the review was completed. In a letter to the Regents, Frye said the objections are not sufficient to keep ISMRRD open. "The institute does not now excell in the three areas of teaching, research, or service," he said. Ronald Bishop, chairman of the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs, will read a letter to the Regents today stating the faculty's position on the closure. TONIGHT'S BEER NIGHT AT UNO'S j Subscribe to The Michigan Daily I Are you wondering about when to get an MBA? Talk to us. More and more, recent college graduates think they should go straight into a job. We think that's not always the case. The 25% ?«of our stu- dent body who has come without fulltime work experience agrees. Still, there are 75% of our students who have worked fulltime for almost three years, who think their experience has made Nominations Are Now Being Accepted for the Rackham Pre-Doctoral Fellowships For students who have substantially com- pleted all course requirements and depart- mental exams required for admission to .. 1T "- - t _ Al IF UART BEER t AFTER 9 PM. (L///4