Draft registration: Coercing the refusniks See editorial, Page 4. I I C br Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom IE4II Dropping Temperatures are falling, skies are cloudy, there's a chance of snow, and it looks a lot like a month after Christmas. Vol. XCIII, No. 95 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, January 26, 1983 Ten Cents Ten Pages # q I i' y q ai t ., T' 9+A& flMN l lp R4orRYfN1RA i1fNP. \ ' rb1MllBwp¢ !' R Speaki L!gm Reagan calls for tax boosts, Students, march to VP Office in protest By JIM SPARKS ' The fight against defense research on campus escalated yesterday, as nearly 30 students wearing "U-M military research kills" T-shirts mar- mched to Vice-President Charles Over- berger's office and demanded that he appear at a public forum. LSA junior Julia Gittleman had an appointment with Overberger and, pointing to the crowd sitting on the floor, said she brought along some friends. When the group moved into a conference room, Gittleman asked Overberger to appear at a forum and give the adninistration's reasons for the increasing level of military research at the University. THE GROUP SAID Overberger, as vice-president of research, has the final say on what projects are ap- proved, and has a duty to answer spending cuts Daily Photo by JON SNOW Students meet with University Vice President Charles Overberger in his office yesterday to demand a public forum on military research on campus. questions about those projects. "Your decision is final on what research goes on. Whether it is a research with killing or not," said LSA senior Ken Naffziger. Overberger said a forum would be "very helpful and useful," but said it should be organized by the Research Policies Committee, a group of faculty and students who advise the faculty senate on research matters. WHEN LSA SENIOR Tom Marx repeated the group's demand that Overberger give a yes or no answer on whether he would appear at a forum, Overberger refused to commit him- self. "I'll take that as a no," Marx said. "He's going to delay like he has for a year-and-a-half." According to Marx, the impetus for yesterday's mass meeting came when the group learned that George Gamota, the University's director of the Institute of Science and Technology, had cancelled an ap- pearance at a military research forum sponsored by Campus Chapel. See STUDENTS, Page 7 From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Reagan, in his State of the. Union speech yester- day called for a spending freeze on a broad range of domestic programs and other "strong medicine" to curb runaway deficits that have become a 'clear and present danger' to America. The president, in the nationally broadcast speech before a joint session of Congress, told Americans "the early evidence" of an economic turnaround is beginning to come in, but confidence "must be tempered by realism and patience." REAGAN, HOWEVER, asked for corrections in his economic program that would include a selective freeze on non-military spending and a $47 billion reduction in his Pentagon buildup over five years. Reagan proposed an outright freeze on most domestic spending programs, with no inflation allowance. He said federal pay and retirement benefits, both military and civilian, should be frozen for one year, and cost of living increases in Social Security, veterans benefits and the like should be delayed for six months. "I know this is'strong medicine, but so far we have only cut the rate of in- crease in federal spending. . . Taken r. GEO: 'U' slowing negotiations By GLEN YOUNG Negotiators for the Graduate Em- ployees Organization blame Univer- sity officials for the lack of progress being made on a labor contract for teaching assistants, GEO speakers said at a Diag rally yesterday. Almost 40 people gathered in near- freezing temperatures to hear GEO speakers discuss the economic and educational issues surrounding their efforts to sign a contract with the University. AVIsEHRLICH, a member of the union's bargaining team, told the group the negotiations are moving slowly. "Our progress has been minimal and most of it has been fairly preliminary," Erhlich said "The University's position has been to stick to the contract of last summer," which the union voted down in November. Ehrlich said negotiations did not cover issues of central importance to the union until just recently. "We're finally getting down to economics," he said. THE UNIVERSITY is not claiming poverty," said Joe Graves, a union steering committee member. See 'U', Page 3 Reagan ... calls for "strong medicine" as a whole, the budget I am proposing for the next fiscal year will increase no more than the rate of inflation - in other words, the federal government will hold the line on real spending." REAGAN'S OWN budget for fiscal See REAGAN, Page 2 Minnesota PIRG bid to halt draft law fails ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) - A federal judge yesterday agreed that three college men may challenge a law passed by Congress requiring them to prove they registered for the draft before accepting federal student aid money. U.S. District Judge Donald Alsop said the anonymous students - "John Doe, Richard Roe, and Paul Poe" - could intervene in the case challenging the law enacted last fall. BUT ALSOP turned aside a student group that brought the first challenge to the law in the nation. He said the Minnesota Public Interest Research Group could not file the ac- tion on behalf of all college students, since most college men have registered for the draft. Government attorneys had argued that the student group could not bring the suit because none of its members have been affected yet. The law applied to students who seek financial aid for the 1983-84 school year. ALSOP SAID waiting until spring would only delay justice. Jim Miller, executive director of the Minnesota Public Interest Research Group, disputed Alsop's findings rejec- ting the student group as a party in the case. "We find it real surprising," he See MINN., Page 3 Daily Photo by JUN SNUW Students and passers-by listen to Graduate Employees Organization member Joe Graves yesterday at GEO's rally in the Diag.J College presidents fight state ed. cuts WMU reporters clarify charges Orom staff and wire reports LANSING - Further budget cuts for Michigan higher education is akin to "mortgaging the future," the presiden- ts of the state's four-year colleges and universities said yesterday. A delegation of five university presidents visited the Capitol to urge Gov. James Blanchard to choose higher taxes over more budget cuts when he announces his financial recovery plans Wn his State of the State message tonight. THE FIVE, led by John Bernhard of Western Michigan University, hand- delivered a letter signed by University of Michigan President Harold Shapiro and the other 14 chiefs of state in- stitutions. Blanchard was not in his office, but the letter was accepted by his press secretary, Sue Carter, who said "He's very aware of the difficulties we all face and will give it his consideration." "We're not saying cut anybody else," Bernhard said. "But for the past four years, we have endured cuts that have seriously damaged our higher education system." THE GOVERNOR'S financial crisis council recently recommended that the estimated $850 million budget deficit be dealt with by raising the income tax and cutting about $325 million from the state budget - $60 million of that from four-year colleges and universities. Shapiro said last night that he believed the council never contacted representatives of higher education for information before making its recom- By GEORGEA KOVANIS Reporters at Western Michigan University's student newspaper, which has accused the school's board of trustees of illegally holding private meeings, said yesterday the meetings were held in restaurants during an in- formal breakfast and dinner. Michael Villaire, editor-in-chief of WMU's Western Herald, has accused the board of trustees of illegally making recommendations and discussing legislation during the meals. He and the Herald's staff said an unannounced meeting they attempted to cover just prior to the dinner was adjourned because they were in the room. THE NEWSPAPER'S staff base their charges on the state's Open Meetings Act of 1976 which is intended to open the deliberations of public policy-making bodies to public scrutiny. "I'm not ruling out legal action," said Michael Villaire, editor-in-chief of WMU's Western Herald. "Our goal is to get.the meetings open and we won't file charges unless we have to." WMU attorney Kenneth Smythe denied the newspaper's claim, saying the paper is probably trying' to "generate and create" news to cover. VILLAIRE said the trouble began last Thursday when student reporters tried to cover an unannounced meeting' between the faculty senate executive board and a committee of the board of trustees. The meeting was adjourned before it even began when officials realized reporters were in the room, Villaire said. University officials gathered later on that night for a dinner at the school's student center, Villaire said. Trustee secretary Chauncey Brinn blocked the entrance to the dinner when reporters tried to walk in, he said. Reporters said they saw the makings of a meeting when Brinn stepped aside to call campus security guards. "We observed people with folders out and exchanging notes," Villaire said. SMYTHE DENIES a meeting was being held during the dinner. "We thought (it) was a private din- ner," he said. "They (reporters) weren't invited." Later the Herald reporters learned a breakfast was scheduled for the next day. Villaire said they entered the restaurant and "overheard conver- sation about university, business" bet- ween trustees and adminstrators. "At least two of them had notes out and were holding a meeting," he said. THE BREAKFAST ended minutes after reporters arrived, Villaire said. Smythe said the gatherings could not be considered "meetings" because a quorum was not present. He denied that any official university business was covered during the gatherings and See REPORTERS, Page 7 Shapiro ... signs letter to Blanchard mendation. "The council probably was not well- informed on what the impact of this cut See UNIV., Page 2 1 ': TODAYE Thief stripped of alibi N ACCUSED thief appeared in court in Nairobi, Kenya, wearing only a smile and his shorts after claiming the rest of his clothes had would sell them for a loaf of bread," she said. She ordered Ndung'u held in police custody and set a hearing date on the theft charges. Nice try Ndung'u! ! Hump Hat hits Metrodome THE CREATION of a new hat has been inspired by the rise and fall of the fabric roof at the Hubert Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis,which has collapsed twice from S al- - . .... « .i, .1 --__ T__. 1- --11-A Fh << ...v - computer programs are both only 13 years old. Michael Cornelison and Scott Emigh are computer buffs who whispered schemes for a video venture in seventh grade English class. Corn Software, a division of Texas In- struments, is their boyhood dream come true. The games include "Alpine," a slalom on the TV screen through gates and around the trees, "Missile Strike," a battle in the sky, and 29 others with leaping frogs, hurling meteors, radioactive snowflakes, wandering camels, lunar landers, all made for Tox Ta ynctrmrntc nnc Annl ('mm.. 1,r At :e i.. : Also on this date in history: " 1910 - Boarding house owners threatened students that if rent prices aren't raised, the houses would be forced to serve hash more often. " 1965 - The Interfraternity Council found Trigon guilty of religious discrimination. The fraternity is given two weeks to change their rituals. " 1972 - The mother of communist activist Angela Davis spoke before the Law School trying to drum up student sup- port for the Free Angela campaign. The former UCLA i I