'E' for effort See Editorial, Page 4 tic Sit Eitgan Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom 1E3ailj Dropping Today will be partly cloudy with a high only in the upper 30s. Vol. XCIII, No.73 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, December 7, 1982 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Faculty committee re ects bid for student member By FANNIE WEINSTEIN LSA faculty members voted down a motion yesterday, by a three to one margin, to add a student to the college's influential Executive Committee. The majority of the faculty members opposed physics Prof. Marc Ross' motion to include a student on the committee on the grounds that students already have adequate input into the college's decision-making process. OTHERS ARGUED that students don't have enough experience to serve on the college's most influential com- mittee or claimed one student would not be representative of the entire student body. More than 150 members turned out 'See FACULTY, Page 10 Milliken: Universities can't take euts Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Readying for reindeer Ed Harris (left) and John Loughrin put the finishing touches on this new office building on Catherine Street by the Farmer's Market. They rushed to finish the job in time for Santa's Christmas Eve landing. ECB ch airman resigns By JIM SPARKS The chairman of the English Composition Board resigned last week, in the midst of a review which may slice its budget by as much as 60 percent. English Prof. Daniel Fader, who began developing the writing program in 1976, resigned Wednesday. His term will now end Jan. 1, about six months earlier than planned. FADER SAID he had talked with LSA Dean Peter Steiner and the two agreed that "since the unit was being reviewed it would be a good time for it (his term) to end." He said by stepping down now, a new chairman will be able to go through the rest of the review process and live with the results. Steiner gave the news to a surprised composition board staff Wednesday afternoon. ACCORDING to John Reiff, coordinator of upper- level writing for the board, Steiner said Fader had not been giving the committee enough information on the impact that different-sized cuts would probably have on the unit. "He (Steiner) used the term "stonewalling," Reiff said. "Dan (Fader) had taken the position with the review committee that cuts of any size would change the unit so fundamentally that it would not be possible to continue its work," Reiff said. Barbey Dougherty, a lecturer for the board echoed Rieff's comment. "I just don't think he (Fader) feels it's appropriate to have a budget cut," she said. STEINER SAID yesterday he understood by "hearsay" that "the review committee was not en- tirely satisfied that they had enough access to staff and some of the staff didn't have access (to the com- mittee) soon enough." Butethe primary reason for a new chairman is to avoid any confusion as to who is in authority as the unit See ENGLISH, Page 6 pResidents campaigan to repeal pot law By KRISTIN STAPLETON The campaign to repeal Ann Arbor's $5 pot law was revived last night as city resident William Bullard told City Council members of a new petition drive to put the repeal on the city's April ballot. The repeal was originally proposed by Mayor Louis Belcher in October, but he backed down on the issue when he did not get enough support among his ABETH SCOTT fellow Republican council members to place the question on the ballot. nference A GROUP of citizens said last week d connec- that they would take the initiative through a petition drive, and Bullard made the formal announcement last l any>night. / n "I wish to inform you that there is a small army growing of more than a according to hundred (who support the repeal),, and pment com- it is growing every day," Bullard said. "We intend to win, we intend that Ann e built in two Arbor no longer be a pusher's paradise," Bullard said, calling the yen-story of- drug problem a "blight on the city." euilding. The AT LEAST 3,500 signatures are Ann, Huron, needed by January to put the proposal on the April ballot. If the city ordinance s-a thirteen were repealed, marijuana offenses -hese will be would be punishable under state law, ngton, First, which provides for a fine of up to a IL, Page 10 See RESIDENTS, Page 10 By BILL SPINDLE With wire reports Gov. William Milliken yesterday gave a glimmer of hope to University administrators who are fearing another executive order cutting state aid to higher education. He said that the state's public univgr- sities cannot stand another cutback and that he would prefer to raise taxes to balance the state's budget than to have to order more cuts. BUT administrators have reacted cautiously to the statement, which Milliken made in an interview with the Michigan News Network, noting that the decision will probably not be up to him anyway. Milliken has said that he would rather leave the decisions about how to deal with the state's latest fiscal crisis to in- coming Gov. James Blanchard, who will take office in early January. Milliken has said Blanchard will be able to make a more educated decision about how to erase the estimated $500 million deficit because next month he will have more recent indications of the shape of the state's economy. Blanchard, however, said the Milliken administration should "face the music" and deal with the problem itself before leaving Lansing. IN AN interview yesterday, Milliken pointed to the dangers further cutbacks in state aid could pose for public univer- sities. "If we continue to cut in the same manner we will, perhaps, irreparably damage our system of higher education, which is noted for its ex- cellence across the country and our whole human service network," he said, "And before we do that we must either have the economy recovering to provide the additional revenue and resources we need or we should be willing to get out and raise taxes to gain further revenue," Milliken added. UNIVERSITY officials, however, were skeptical about Milliken's an- nouncement. "He has made that statement before," said University Vice President for State Relations Richard Kennedy," (but it) suggests how close we are to cuts that are really unmanageable to institutions of higher education." Although Milliken's announcement showed an understanding of the danger of further cuts, he may find it difficult to convince other state leaders to back him in a politically unpopular tax hike, Kennedy said. See MILLIKEN, Page 6 State holds upm one for new By NEIL CHASE The state legislature surprised University officials last week by placing a number of state-financed projects, including the construction of a new building for the engineering college, on hold until the state can work out its budget problems. The state has promised to spend more money than it has for such projects, and it still has to decide which projects will be cut back. Until it can make that decision, the money for all of the projects will not be released, state and University officials said yesterday. RICHARD Kennedy, the University's vice president for state relations, said yesterday the University expects the state to come through eventually on its See STATE, Page 6 Feds threaten GSL-defaulting employes Daily Photo by ELIZ Developers Richard Berger (left) and Terry Seyler display a model of "Huron Plaza," a proposed hotel/co center complex on Huron and Main Streets. Inset shows a walkway passing over one of the adjacent streets and ting two parts of the complex. Council By KRISTIN STAPLETON A local development compan night plans to build a hotel/ complex which would occupy Ann Arbor. Before beginning constructi seeking a $6 million loan from begin in May, 1983, if council loan. The company has already pu buildings currently on those Lounge, 109 N. Main, and the bt the two it does not have optio hears hotel complex p Bank building and the old county jail property,a y presented to city council last Richard Berger, a representative of the develo conference-center/courthouse pany. two city blocks in downtown THE COMPLEX, called Huron Plaza, would be phases, according to Berger. on, Huron-D&A Associates is Phase One would include two buildings-a sev athe city. Construction would fice building and a ten-court District Court be approves the project and the buildings will be located at the block bounded by Ashley, and Main Streets. rchased options on most of the Phase Two would include two more buildings sites, including Joe's Star floor hotel and an eight-floor conference center.T us depot, and will negotiate for on the adjoining block bounded by Huron, Washi ns on, the Michigan National See COUNC WASHINGTON (AP) - The federal government will garnish the pay or pensions of 46,860 current or former employees if they do not meet demands to repay $68 million in defaulted student loans, Education Secretary T. H. Bell said yesterday. Bell said it "is the beginning, the kickoff of a new game in collecting on our loans."The deadbeats on the federal payroll are among 800,000 ex- students who owe the government $1.1 billion in loans. BELL FOUND the defaulters by using a computer to check the Social Security numbers and last names of 10.3 million past or present civil servan- ts and military employees against a list of student loans defaulters. The crackdown follows enactment two months ago of legislation authored by Sen. Charles Percy (R-Ill.), that for the first time gives the government the authority to garnish up to 15 percent of the pay of student loan defaulters on its payroll. Percy, joining Bell at a news con- ference, said the large number of defaulters in the government's employ "is really a slap in the face to every taxpayer in the country." Bell noted the defaulters were cutting into the amount of money available for loans to current students. THE COMPUTER match showed 46,860 present or former federal em- ployees defaulted on 50,393 loans, some skipping out on more than one loan. The loans, some dating to the early 1960s, were made under four subsidized programs: Federally Insured Student Loans, Guaranteed Student Loans, National Direct Student Loans, and See FEDS, Page 6 TOAY- Staying on top ODGING multi-colored insects and shooting his way out of the grasp of the flagships, LSA junior Eric Steinberg flew to the championship Saturday night in the first Galaga tournament at Bell's Pizza. Steinberg has been a regular Galaga player since Bell's installed the game several months ago, and un- til the tournament he was the pizza shop's undisputed You don't mess around in Elmhurst THIS POLICE officer wasn't about to be railroaded. Patrolman Daniel Buenz instead made the Great Train Arrest-he cited a train for driving too slowly-in fact, not moving at all. The train had been blocking seven crossings in Elmhurst, Ill. for 15 minutes, 5 minutes more than city law allows, Lt. Ralph O'Connell said, and heavy rain had flooded the main underpass. Buenz timed the Hold the ketchup? A MAN WAS jailed yesterday in Kenner, La. on charges of ordering $4,600 worth of French fries to go-from a fast food warehouse in a stolen truck. Police said Lawrence Robinchaux, 34, of Marrero, hopped into a refrigerated truck parked near a Burger King warehouse and drove off with 184 cases of frozen shoestring potatoes. Police spokesperson Ruth Barnett said officers responding to reports of a suspicious vehicle noticed Robichaux fleeing the stopped truck in a van. The truck was missing two situation where "Communists may seize the city and start a red terror." Also on this date in history: " 1914-Scandal rocked the University as a freshman student ran off to Detroit to elope with a woman 19 years his senior. " 1950-Ann Arbor stores stocked their shelves with colored oleo, as sale of the margarine became legal. + 1955-The Student Government Council voted to liberalize the University driving regulations, by lowering the student driver required age from 26 to 21. l C i