A touch of honesty see Editorial, Page 4 E Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom IEIUIIJ Quite Nice Partly.sunny today with a high in the mid 50s. w Vol. XCIIJ, No. 67 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 30, 1982 Ten Cents Twelve Pages I Reagan dismisses 'quick-fix cures From AP and UPI LOS ANGELES - President Reagan told leaders of the nation's cities yesterday that the solution to their grim problems lies in national economic recovery, not in quick-fix federal bailouts from Washington. "Have we all become addicted to temporary bailouts failing to realize that the only answer must be a restoration of our economy from sea to shining sea?" the president asked. "It is time to give up the temporary Band-Aids and placebos and get on to the business of a real cure." "ALL THE government boondoggles in the world won't fix what's ailing us. The only way to cure our problems is to get the economy moving again." Reagan received a lukewarm reception as he ad- dressed the National League of Cities before winding up a weeklong vacation in California. He flew back to Washington yesterday evening and arranged to meet with congressional leaders this morning before em- barking on his first diplomatic trip to South America. One thing Reagan must decide before leaving on the five-day tour is whether to ask Congress to move the July 1 income tax cut up to Jan. 1 as part of his plan to stimulate economic recovery. Republican leaders in Congress have warned the president there is little bipartisan support for such a plan. THE CITY officials greeted Reagan with only polite applause. Before the session Seattle Mayor Charles Royer, first vice president of the league, said the :organization wanted to give Reagan the message that -the nation's cities are hurting and need help. In his speech, Reagan urged passage of his proposed urban enterprise zones, along with one of the main proposals before the lame-duck session of Congress this week-the nickel-a-gallon gas tax hike to help rebuild the nation's highways and bridges. "I have come before you with no magic wand," Reagan told hundreds of municipal leaders. "I am fighting in Washington to reduce, not increase, the big spending that keeps our federal budget badly out of balance. Although Americans are laboring un- der the highest peacetime tax burden in history, their : money is spent before it even comes in. In a very real' sense, our coffers are empty." MEANWHILE in Washington, the president's top economic advisor, Martin Feldstein, said that a deficit swelling jobs program or forced cuts in interest rates could send inflation spiraling upward again and wreck recovery of necoii n'y "still bottoming out." MX would be only minor help to defense, s study sys Y WASHINGTON (AP) - As the MX missile awaits a crucial test in a House committee, a Congressional Budget Of- fice report said yesterday that the $26; billion nuclear weapon program would make a "relatively small" contribution to the nation's strategic defense. This is a "The MX's contribution to U.S. missile. strategic capabilities would be tains one relatively small - between 5 and 13 per- cent by 1996," when the last of a new destroy eac series of nucler weapons, including B-1 they reache and radar-evading "stealth" bombers Alice Rivl and improved submarine-based fice, told missiles, are deployed, the study said. Chairman J AFTER Pentagon studies lasting letter accon more than a year, President Reagan he agency decided Nov. 22 to base the weapons in plicated tee a closely spaced, "dense pack mice tet arrangement of "super-hardened" un- mine basi derground silos near Cheyenne, attack. Wyoming . BUT, SHEl The concept is based on the theory works and t that many of the Soviet missiles dispat- tial numbe ched to wipe out the MX weapons would tribution t capabilities Interim agreement means pay hike for TAs By BARRY WITT University teaching and staff assistants will receive this term's long- awaited pay boosts this month thanks to a temporary agreement reached Wed- nesday between the administration and the Graduate Employees Organization, the TA union. In addition, TAs will receive an in-, creased tuition waiver to make up for this year's tuition increase, according to University officials. The pay hike and tuition waiver combined will amount to about an extra $400 for the average TA, said John Forsyth, the University's negotiator for GEO con- tracts. BOTH THE wage hike and increased tuition waiver had been held back thus far this term as a result of the union's failure last month to ratify a contract it had negotiated with the University. The agreement reached last week is temporary and should not affect new contract negotiations when the union and the University resume talks next Monday, officials on both sides said. TAs had been threatened with losing their pay hikes this term-which now will be implemented retroactively in their December paychecks-if an agreement had not been reached by Dec. 10, Forsyth said. A communication gap between the administration and the union between the time of the contract's defeat in late October and last Wednesday's meeting was blamed for the delay. Ad-, ministrators said they had wanted to grant the increases, but the contract's defeat made it impossible. The increases in both pay and tuition waivers are similar to those that TAs have received in past years. serviees Reagan ...stays the course Feldstein gave that assessment as Congress recon- vened with Democrats advocating public works programs to put some of the 11.6 million unemployed americans back to work and leaders of both parties pressured the Federal Reserve to reduce interest rates. Feldstein, chairman of Reagan's council of economic advisers, said unemployment can be brought down from its post-Depression high of 10.4 percent to 6 per- cent or 7 percent over the next six years with a steady economic growth rate of 4 percent. But he told reporters that growth will occur only if Congress and the president cut federal budget deficits during that period to one-fourth of the projection for 1983-from $115 billion to $20 billion. "I can't see how we can have a healthy recovery un- less we get those deficits coming down and coming down sharply," he said. SENATE Republican Leader Howard Baker of Tenn- essee said Sunday he sees no willingness by Congress to cut spending much more and that the onus is on the See REAGAN, Page 6 Slum ber party Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT While most students valiantly struggled to compose a schedule with nothing earlier than ten o'clocks during CRISP's opening hours yesterday, others found time to catch up on some nap time. Cheap telephone available in dorm, rooms By BETH ALLEN University dormitory residents don't have to rely on Michigan Bell for long distance telephone service, if they're willing to pay a little extra for phone equipment. The University permits students to subscribe to cheaper long-distance phone services like MCI and SPRINT, as long as the student is willing to pay for the touch-tone adapter needed to modify the University's dial phones. WHILE STUDENTS can subscribe to any long distance service they choose, members of the Resident Hall Association have distributed information to the dorms about hooking up MCI. MCI will pay RHA $5 for each student who subscribes to the service this year under an agreement reached last August with MCI, according to RHA President Brian Woolery. In addition to paying a subscription fee to MCI, students must also spend about $40 for a touch-tone adapter, which fits into the mouthpiece of the dial phones in the dorms. MCI OFFICIALS stress that they aren't trying to put MCI in every dorm room - for students who don't make many calls to cities outside Michigan, the service won't save any money. In addition, MCI provides phone service only to certain cities, so a caller cannot be connected to locations not in MCI's network. But for some students, the service can cut 12 percent to 25 percent from Michigan Bell rates during business hours Monday through Friday, and can save 25 to 45 percent on calls made between 5 p.m. and 8 a.m. weekdays, according to MCI spokesmen. A SPOKESMAN for SPRINT said that while the company has not actively advertised within dormitories, some dorm residents do have the system in their rooms or call home via their parents' SPRINT lines to save money. Both SPRINT and MCI offer services with a $10 monthly See LONG, Page 6 AP Photo n artist's concept of the Closely Spaced Basing mode for the MX Each of 100 superhardened capsules, spaced 1800 feet apart, con- missile in a launch cannister. h other by "fratricide" as d the target area. in, director of the budget of- House Budget Committee ames Jones (D-Okla.) in a rmpanying the report, that "cannot judge the com- chnical issues that deter- her MX is CSB (closely ing) would survive" a Soviet E SAID "Even if CSB basing he MX survives in substan- ers, the percentage con- o United States strategic would be small." MSU faculty rejects unionization The CBO measured those capabilities in total warheads and warheads that could hit such "hardened" Soviet targets as missile silos and command bunkers. "If there was warning of an attack. the MX would contribute 5 percent of all U.S. warhead inventories likely to sur- vive a Soviet first strike; it would provide 7 percent of those surviving warheads capable of destroying Soviet targes hardened against a nuclear blast," Rivlin said. "WERE A Soviet attack to occur as a total surprise - destroying U.S. bom- See STUDY, Page 2 By FANNIE WEINSTEIN Although the Michigan State Univer- sity faculty recently voted, to reject unionization, some faculty leaders still see the vote as a step forward. In the Nov. 17-18 elections, 939 faculty members voted against any represen- tation while sme 650 others split their votes between two possible bargaining agents - the American Association of Univerdsity Professors and the MSU Faculty Associates. THE VOTE marked the third time in the past 10 years the MSU faculty has chosen to forego the collective bargaining process. "Although we're disappointed by the outcome of this election, I feel fairly good about the level of the campaign," said Prof. Philip Korth, president of the Faculty Associates. The group, which is an arm of the Michigan Education Association, received 252 votes. "I think we've come a long way from 10 years ago," Korth said. Prof. Philip McGuire stressed the fact that the AAUP's share of the vote went up from 15 percent in the 1972 and 1978 elections to 25 percent - or 400 votes - in this election.- "As a group," he said, "we in the AAUP feel we made some gains." MCGUIRE SAID he thought the in- creased turnout in this election - 83 percent of those eligible as opposed to 67 percent in the previous votes - made the difference: "We thought there'd be See MSU, Page 3 TODAY Schedule switcheroo ONCE AGAIN the University has pulled the old scheduling switcheroo. Time schedule changes are many and varied this year but the Scheduling Office has provided students with a list of these changes which appears on Page 2 of today's Daily. So check your schedule against the list on Page 2 to avoid further the magazine's January edition, is based on responses from more than 65,300 men and 14,900 women to a questionnaire that appeared in the magazine two years ago. "The questionnaire revealed not a profile of the average American but a picture of the veterans of the sexual revolution," the magazine said. Unlike sex researcher Alfred Kinsey, the survey found "no connection between education and sexual behavior." Kinsey's survey in the 1950s found college-educated people had more sex and more varied sex than those with less education. The readers' sur- vey found that 58 percent of the women under 21 said they *More than half of both men and women had had sex with more than one person in the same 24-hour period and about a third had had sex with more than one person at the same time. * About a third of the female respondents said they did not use birth control, and almost the same percent reported having had abortions. C " 1955 -Elaborate plans were made to recover Chicago House, West Quad to an all male house.The women would be moved en masse to the newly completed Couzens Hall: according to the plan. " 1967 -A group of prominent Michigan alumni formed a nation-wide campaign to support the appointment of Iowa Athletic Director Fbrest &ershevski to the dual posts of head football coach and athletic director at the University. &aershevski starred as a Wolverine qua rter- back in 1942. C I