: - -.9 - No gift from the faculty See EDITORIAL, Page 4 C, tr- Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom 4Iaitjj Some snow Cloudy today, with a chance of light snow, high in the mid 30s. It will become colder tonight, with a high in the teens and a possibility of more snow flurries. ldmlh , 0 Vol. XCIII, No. 74 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, December 8, 1982 Ten Cents Eight Pages Student conduct *guidelines rejected by MSA By ROB FRANK The Michigan Student Assembly last night voted not to endorse a newly prepared set of guidelines for student conduct at the University. The decision followed over a half hour of debate by the assembly, during which several members argued that normal procedures are sufficient to punish student lawbreakers and that ad- ditional guidelines were unnecessary. "It seems like we're setting up a * quasijudiciary body," said Barry Rudofsky, a representative from the law school. "(Students) should be responsible to society. The University should not be a mother or father to students." THE NEW policy was prepared by a University committee in an attempt to See MSA, Page 2 House nixes funds for MX production AP Photo After the deluge The swollen waters of the Meramec River nearly cover the street signs in Arnold, Mo. yesterday, as rescue workers kept an eye on flooded trailers and cars. The storms have been blamed for the deaths of more than 20 people in the Mississippi Valley. New city chief receives praise From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The House, in a dramatic 245-176 vote, yesterday refused to give President Reagan the nearly $1 billion he wants to start production of the MX missile. The vote marked a personal defeat for Reagan, who had led an intensive administration lobbying campaign to keep the production money intact. Fifty of Reagan's fellow Republicans joined 195 Democrats to give the MX opponents their majority. The minority consisted of 138 Republicans and 38 Democrats. ARRAYED against Reagan on the MX issue were advocates, of a U.S.- Soviet nuclear freeze and members who contended that the MX was a good place to make budget economies since Congress has not yet decided whether its program to base the missiles will work. During the intense White House lob- bying effort that preceded the vote, Reagan said a field of 100 MXs - renamed "Peacekeeper" - is an "ab- solute necessity" for his defense buildup and to keep pressure on the Soviets to negotiate a new arms control agreement. Calling the outcome "a grave mistake," Reagan-said congressmen who voted against the MX were "sleep- walking into the future." He said there was still time to reverse the House decision, and he pledged to take his case to the people to rally support for the missile. AMID SIMILAR predictions by some of his allies, Rep. Joseph Addabbo, (D- N.Y.), the chief MX opponent, criticized the weapons program as an example of wasteful military spending. I don't think we have to fund every expensive toy that the admirals, generals and contractors want," said Addabbo, sponsor of the motion to cut MX funds. But Rep. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.) and other administration supporters main- tained that the nation could not afford to delay modernizing its strategic ar- senal in the face of a huge Soviet arms buildup. THE DEFENSE Department withheld any official comment. However, a Pentagon legislative strategist said, "We don't feel the battle is over." The analyst, who asked not to be iden- tified, added, "We intend to continue to work the problem on the Senate side." This was a clear indication the Reagan administration was banking its hopes for winning approval in the Republican- controlled Senate and then in a sub- sequent House-Senate conference. And both sides on Tuesday's House vote agreed that the decision was not the end for the weapon President Reagan says is central to modernizing See HOUSE, Page 3 By JACKIE YOUNG Scorning a $25,000 national search like the one that made Terry Sprenkel Ann Arbor's city administrator three years ago, City Council Monday night gave Ac- ting City Administrator Godfrey "Tom" Collins the city's top administrative job. Although some Democratic councilmembers had called for a consistent way to search for ad- ministrators, none of the candidates from the last search matched the qualifications of Collins, accor- ding to Edward Hood (R-Fourth Ward).' "HE IS eminently well-qualified, experienced ... bright, well-educated, has a strong financial background, is smart and competent, and he doesn't get entangled in political controversies," Hood said. The previous administrator, Terry Sprenkel, was fired last May in a shroud of controversy. Coun- cilmembers and other city officials have declined comment about the situation. Collins has been working with the city since July, 1978 whenhhe was assistant city administrator. When then-administrator Sylvester Murray left for another position in Cincinnati, Collins served as acting ad- ministrator until Sprenkel was appointed. COLLINS THEN worked under Sprenkel in city engineering services until Sprenkel was fired. He has also been actively involved with Ann Arbor's Down- town Development Authority. Before coming to Ann Arbor, Collins had worked as the city manager of Coldwater, Michigan. "The city administrator is the most important per- son" in the city, said Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward). The city department heads must all report to him as well as to the council, Morris explained. "This is a weak-mayor city. The mayor is basically a han- dshaker," she said. LOWELL PETERSON (D-First Ward) said of Collins, "Our (city council's) experience with him so far is impressive. He's even-handed, gets along well with his co-workers, is open to working with people, and has a good working style." Louis Velker (R-Fifth Ward) agreed. "I think he was an ideal choice," he said. Councilmember James Blow (R-Second Ward) said, "He's (Collins) done an excellent job as an interim city administrator." Mayor Louis Belcher was unavailable for comment on the appointment. Collins said in the future, he hopes "to review the overall organization of city government and to make recommendations in order to more efficiently do the job." He also said he hopes to analyze the duties of his office more closely. Civil rights panel blasts Reagan busing an WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights denounced the Reagan administration's education policies yesterday, charging that its opposition to busing for integration and its efforts to make cuts in aid could return separate and unequal public schools for minorities. In a separate report, the six-member panel criticized President Reagan's largely unsuccessful effort to cut more than $4 billion from aid to schools and college students in fiscal 1983. It said the cuts would "undermine the fragile gains made by the least privileged in our society." IN THE 54-page statement on school d student ai desegregatin, the independent com- mission accused the Justice Depar- tment of opposing "the most effective remedy for desegregating the public schools - the mandatory reassignment of students - and the most effective tool for implementing this remedy - student transportation. . . " It charged that the Justice Depar- tment, by supporting "voluntary methods of desegregation which over time have proved ineffective, would have the nation return to pre-1954 stan- dards . . . and revert to the separate- and-unequal blot that has stained our nation's credo of equal justice under law." d policies "The Justice Department is ob- structing our national policy to achieve school desegregation," commissioner Murray Saltzman, a Baltimore rabbi, said at a news conference. COMMENTING on the report, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said: "The stated policy of this administration is to achieve in- tegration, but we do not think busing is the way to achieve it." Speakes also said the administration had tailored its cuts in aid to college students so that students from families with incomes of less than $12,000 ac- tually would get larger grants. Gays to march in Diag for change in 'U' laws By SHARON SILBAR "It is the policy of the University of Michigan that no person, on the basis of race, sex, color, religion, national origin or ancestry, age, marital status, handicap, or Viet- nam-era veteran status, shall be discriminated against in em- ployment, educational programs and activities, or admissions." If the ten people who work with Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus (LaGROC) have their way, the above quote will soon read a little differently. LAGROC IS an organization working toward an amendment of University by-laws to include a non-discrimination clause based on sexual orientation. Ac- See GAYS, Page 3 the man who fired the shot. From AP and UPI "It may well be, as horrible as it is to HUNTSVILLE, Texas - The death of contemplate, that the state of Texas the first U.S. inmate executed by lethal executed the wrong man," said injection was praised yesterday as a Strickland, who failed to persuade the "hope for victims" by the mother of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles to n &man he allegedly killed. But Jack give a 60-day reprieve to Brooks. Strickland, the former prosecutor who Brooks was convicted of killing David originally sought the death sentence, Gregory, 26, a mechanic at a Fort Wor- said the state may have killed the th used-car lot. Brooks and Woody e wrong man. Loudres, 38, kidnapped Gregory while h e beenthey were test driving a car. He was Strickland, who convinced jurors to taken to a motel, his hands and feet give Charlie Brooks Jr. the death were bound, and he was shot once in the penalty, said on ABC's "Good Morning head. in n o c e n t America" show that he now believes Loudres, 38, also was convicted and the state never will know if it executed See EXECUTED, Page 2 I Down the Shute Doily Photo by TOD WOOLF Workers ingeniously rig up a chain of trash barrels to guide the remains of several torn down walls in the West Engineering Building. The building is currently undergoing renovation. TODAY Cooking to survive YOU MOVED out of the dormitory and into your own apartment. Now you've got your own own room, no more quiet hours, and no more awful dorm food. The one thing you didn't count on is that your roommate's Spain Casserole - his favorite dish - is worse thanaanything the cooks at South Quad could ever dream of. So it's MacDonald's or starvation. But wait, there's still hope. To help fight the problems of Student Government. There will be 5,000 free copies distributed throughout the Diag, local stores, and apar- tment buildings. Mmm-Mmm-Good A TAME rooster that had become the mascot for the headquarters of the Humane Society of Greater Miami has disappeared, and officials fear the worst. "We're really concerned," Director Kenneth McGovern said last Thursday. "becase it was iust before Advice from Santa LOOKING FOR the perfect gift for that special someone? Take some advice from Santa. The Briarwood Mall Santa Claus reports that almost two-thirds of the children he meets ask for Barbie dolls. Said Kringle, "I'll tell you, I wish I owned some stock in the (Barbie) company." Other much requested gifts are E.T. dolls, Dukes of Hazzard cars and dolls, and Strawberry Shortcake paraphernalia. Most sur- prising is the low number of requests for video and elec- Also on this date in history: " 1916-The Hoover Steel Ball company of Ann Arbor was forced to shut down after 140 women went on strike deman- ding a 4ยข an hour raise. * 1953-Members of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity found a pregnant goat named Reginald chained to their bathroom sink. s 1973-Members of the Gay Awareness Women's Kollec- tive filed complaints with the Ann Arbor Human Rights Department against the Rubyiat charging it with discrimination against gay women. -I .I I