The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 10, 1982-Page 3 SOME HA VE HUNDREDS Profs get booked up at the Grad By CHARLES THOMSON I Although building a personal library takes years of vork and vast sums of money, some University professors can, and do, stockpile hundreds of books- !with a little help from the Graduate Library. SUnder the current circulation rules of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library, faculty members can borrow an unlimited number of books. And some professors, taking full advantage of the opportunity, have as many as 500 books checked out at the same time. ' A SURVEY last year showed that between 25 and 30 faculty members each had more than 100 books from the Graduate Library in their possession, according to Jim Cruse, head of Circulation Services for the Matcher Library. Books may be kept indefinitely if renewal notices periodically are mailed in and the 6lumes are not demanded by others. . Cruse, however, said the library is "not really" concerned about the number of books professors have porrowed from the library. "If someone really needs (the books), we know where they are," Cruse said. "I see nothing wrong with people having 100 or 200 books." CRUSE SAID some faculty members might use the library as a handy way to establish private collec- tions. "It's possible," he said, "but I think the library would be on very dangerous ground if we started to question what is legitimate use and what isn't." Some professors assert that the library's borrowing privileges, coupled with the size of its collection, are an important attraction for the University. Charles Tilly, a professor of history and sociology, said the policy has eased considerably his work on three research projects. Tilly currently has an estimated 500 books from the library. Some of the volumes have been checked out for as long as six years, although they typically are returned within three weeks, Tilly said. TILLY SAID his three projects employ one full- time person whose major responsibility is keeping track of the library books used by the project. Tilly, who has done research at the University of Toronto and Harvard University, said the University has "a better library for our purposes than either of those." Undergraduates are allowed many of the same borrowing privileges as faculty members, Cruse said, including the ability to renew books an unlimited number of times. Undergraduates, however, cannot renew books through the mail and, unlike professors, are fined for overdue books. Cruse said he found it amusing that persons with hundreds of books checked out often return books very promptly when others request them, but that it is people "with three or four books that resort to making up stories." "Some of our best borrowers have large numbers of books charged out," he said. "The number is not -the issue." . This story was reprinted from the Daily's summer edition. 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But the battle was far from over, and further moves to' stem the liberal talkathon were scheduled for early next week. IN YESTERDAY'S test, 47 members avoted against cloture, the parliamen- tary term for limiting debate to 100 hours, with only 41 favoring it. Under Senate rules, 60 votes are needed to curb a filibuster. salt abortion debc Both sides had predicted that initial outcome, in part because several senators have yet to return from a congressional Labor Day recess. Liberals have lined up against the an- ti-abortion package, sponsored by Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) saying it is a direct attack op the Supreme Court's, ability to interpret the Constitution. ONE PROVISION is a congressional finding that the Supreme Court was mistaken in 1973 when it legalized most abortions. "This amendment is an attempt to reverse the Supreme Court by statute rather than constitutional amen- dment," said Sen. Bob Packwood (R- Ore.), leader of the opposition. The Helms proposal would also per- manently ban direct or' indirect federal payments for abortions. ANOTHER, feature of the measure declares that human life begins at con- ception. And a separate provision calls for expedited consideration by the Supreme Court of any new abortion cases. A few hours before the vote, Reagan spoke out for the second consecutive day on abortion and other social issues which New Right conservatives say the president has neglected. ae ails In a speech in Manhattan, Kan., the president called for congressional ac- tion, not only on' abortion, but on restoring school prayer in schools and for House passage of a constitutional amendment. to balance the federal budget. "WE HAVE a sacred duty to protect the innocent human life of an unborn child," he said, after a year and a half of relative inactivity on issues dear to hardline conservatives. Majority Leader Baker said Thur- sday that Reagan phoned him several days ago to say he would lobby to end the liberal filibuster. Business expansion drops despite hopes flr investmPnuinhc ~1 1 ll Pl 1 T-.E %_C3 I~..1 UJ WASHINGTON (AP) - Cramped by slow sales and poor profits, business executives plan to cut 1982 spending on expansion and modernization 4.4 per- cent below last year after discounting for inflation, the government reported yesterday. A It would be the first decline since the 1975 recession. And it would come in the face of the Reagan administration's big 1981 tax bill that was supposed to A spur business expansiop and create newjobs. Just three- months ago, executives ,had estimated a 2.4 percent drop in real spending on plants and equip ment this .year. Yesterday's Commerce Depar- tment report said surveys taken in July and August showed plans being scaled :back further. THE NEW decline, which was generally expected, included plans by :the maufacturers to cut real capital ,spending 6.6 percent below last year. Other businesses plan a 3.1 percent decline. Whatever the specific figures, economists inside and outside the government have said for months that 0American business will not be able to "spend the nation but of recession'- -despite earlier administration hopes that investment would be pushed by business tax breaks provided in last year's bill.' The new surveys were taken about one year after Congress passed that legislation. But with the recession heading into its second year, private economists $ay, there has been little reason for businesses to expand production facilities. U.S. INDUSTRY is using less than 70 percent of its presdent capacity, accor- i l./ .L.1 W w i l.ffl jkI i.7 A9 Special SALEI Women's Bass > $4400 Reg. $52.00 IQ GIANT. MERCHANDISE i= SALE! Senior Citizens' Guild. 502 West Huron Street Friday, September 10th 1000M-7:00 PM and Saturda ySept. 11th 8:00 AM-12:00 noon NEW AND USED SHOP AND SA VE * New Merchandise " Collectibles * Electrical Appliances * Clothing (New and Used) Women's, Men's and Children's * Linens " Dishes * Kitchen Utensils * Toys * Miscellaneous Items BAKE SALE Delicious Lunch and Dinner Served Friday, September 10th LUNCH-11:30 AM-2:00 PM DINNER-4:00 PM-6:30 PM DON'T MISS THIS FABULOUS SALE! A Bargain For Everyone Ample Parking in West Park on Chapin Side Baldridge ...expects investmen upturn ding to government figures. Donald Straszheim, vice president of Wharton Econometrics, said that situation leads managers to ask why they should invest in new plants and equipment "when they've got too much already, when they can't sell what they make." Putting the best face on the new figures, Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige said the expected 1982 drop in capital spending "is notably smaller" than the 11.5 percent actual decline during the 1975 recession. He said last year's tax bill was a major factor in keeping the decline as low as now estimated, and noted that the surveys were taken before interest rates began falling 9harply in August. CAMPU 619 E. Libe IS DOWN arty 217 S VISA-MASTER CARD-AMERICAN EXPRESS NTOWN . Main I,, Sack to School Special,/ COL L EOCT T"I'GAN BOS - l f enbe -HAPPENINGS- HIGHLIGHT Bargain hunters in search of inexpensive household items may have some luck at the Kiwanis Club Summer Sale being held today between 4 and 8 p.m. *at the Kiwanis Activities Center, Washington at First St. FILMS AAFC-Insatiable, 7,8:30 & 10:30 p.m., Nat. Sci. CFT-A Clockwork Orange, 4, 7, & 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Cinema Il-Spellbound, 7 p.m., Frenzy, 9 p.m., Angell Hall, Aud. A. Cinema Guild - Dr. No 7 p.m., Goldfinger, 9:05, Lorch Hall. MISCELLANEOUS Ark - Hot Mud Family, 8:30 p.m., 1421 Hill. Panhellenic Association - Plant sale, 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Michigan Union. Folk Dancing Club -Teaching, 8-9:30 p.m., dancing, 8 p.m.-12 a.m., in front of the north Campus Dental Bldg. Chemistry - Keiji Morokuma, "Potential Energy Surfaces and Transition States for Chemical Reactions," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Bldg. AstroFest-Jim Loudon, "Space Shuttle Confirmed," 7:30 p.m., MLB 3. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: HL il $3.29 Quicker Clicker® PLUS SOC Super H i-Polymer® Lead 12-Pac PLUS Two Refill Erasers ALL FOR $345 $4.39 Value There's a lot in a name,