A useless aid program See editorial, Page 4 C I tr Sitt Eitgan Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom ; ai Spongy High today in the low 40s. Chance of rain tonight with low in the mid-30s. Vol. XCIII, No. 98 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 29, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages F Med. School faces 25% enrollment cut By SCOTT KASHKIN The outlook is grim for the University's medical school, which has lost 15 percent of its budget due to cuts in state and federal support over the past four years. The nationally ac- claimed institution now suffers from a deteriorating curriculum, school officials maintain. Following a growing national trend, Univer- sity administrators have proposed a medical school enrollment reduction which they feel is the only realistic option for preserving academic quality as well as keeping it affor- dable. STATE SUPPORT, which comprises a major portion of the classroom instruction budget, has consistently dropped over the past few years, necessitating either a 25 percent enrollment cut or a large tuition increase, of- ficials say. "Over the past three to four years, reduc- tions to the medical school have totalled 12 to 15 percent (of its budget) and something has to give .. . It would take a 30 percent tuition in- crease to make up for the funding losses," said Peter Ward, interim dean of the medical school. Pressure for immediate action has grown. "The ultimate decision of medical school class size must, be made by February or the ad- missions committee cannot proceed with any program (for next fall)," said Ward. THE STATE HAS also exerted its influence to reduce enrollment. Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye cited a state study of the health care system when he first suggested the possible reductions to the Regents in November 1981. Since then, further investigation has shown the necessity for immediate consideration and the Regents briefly discussed the issue at their December meeting, but postponing action. The University medical school is not the only one to suffer these days. At a meeting of state medical school deans last month, Wayne State set as a goal a reduction of 18 percent and the two medical schools at Michigan State Univer- sity agreed to curtail their enrollment and call off an expansion project. THE MEETING HAD been prompted by a state call for a reduction in enrollment in state medical schools. Lenore Paredis, executive director for the Michigan Council of Medical School Deans said the State Committee of Management and Budget had suggested the cuts because of dwindling state resources. The study cited by Frye had been conducted by the state Department of Management and Budget under the Milliken administration, and had indicated a physician surplus by 1999, which would drive up health care costs to unaf- fordable levels. Health costs would rise, the department said, because the doctors would tend to administer unnecessary health care to drum up business during a physician surplus. NOT EVERYONE AGREES with the state's verdict, however. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) said he would probably vote against such sizeable reductions because he maintains the projected surplus would work itself out. "I would rather have the law of supply and demand take care of that," he said. Vice President f ' State Relations Richard Kennedy has repea edly said the reductions will not occur unless the state assures the University it will not make further reductions on a per capita basis as the enrollment drops. Baker said the University had promised to consider reductions suggested by the state in exchange for state support of the Replacement Hospital project. REGENT NELLIE Varner (D-Detroit) said she also remembered a tie between an See MED., Page 2 Nat. Res. students divert tuition in protest jBy NEIL CHASE School of Natural Resources students launched a plan yesterday to divert their tuition into the school's general fund in protest of the proposed cuts in the school's budget. But University officials said last night the students' tuition checks will not be acceptable as tuition payments, and won't even be cashed by the University. MEMBERS OF the Ad-Hoc Commit- Itee of Concerned SNR Students enlisted about 50 people in the new protest yesterday, and expect many more to sign up next week, according to graduate student Martha Tableman. Tableman said the students modeled their plan after similar tactics anti- military groups have used to protest the use of federal income tax dollars for military purposes. The plan is designed to attract attention to the school's plight and to force the Regents to question the 'University budget committee's recommendation that the school's budget be trimmed by one-third. Protesting students will endorse their tuition checks so the money only can be deposited into the school's general fund. But University officials maintain the checks will not be credited toward tuition. "THEORETICALLY, if we went based on their (the students') New figures raise hopes for economy WASHINGTON (AP) - The gover- nment's main economic forecasting guage took its biggest jump in more than two years last month. Private economists quickly declared the long recession over, but the Reagan ad- ministration. more cautiously said recovery would start either this month or next. No one predicted robust recovery soon, however, based on the Commerce Department report yesterday. - THE INDEX of Leading Indicators, a compilation of measures designed to show future economic trends, rose 1.5 percent in December, the department said. That was the largest gain since a 2.8 percent burst -in September 1980 as the nation was pulling out of that year's short but steep recession. As for the more recent downturn, which began in July 1981, more and more analysts are saying it is over. "THE LONG-awaited economic recovery is no longer illusory," said John Albertine,, president of the American Business Conference, a group of midsize, growing companies. "The sharp rise in the December in- dex, combined with other positive statistics for the month, implies that December marked the turning point for the economy," he said. Lawrence Chimerine, chairman of the Chase Econometrics forecasting firm, said, "At least for now, the recession ended in December." HOWEVER, HE added, that doesn't mean "things are entirely OK again. We've got a long way to go to get back to real economic health." The Reagan administration, burned by past recovery predictionsthat didn't come true, has been slow to declare the recession at an end. At the White House yesterday, Martin Feldstein, chairman of the president's Council of Economic Advisers, said of ficials expect overall economic output in the current first quarter of 1983 to be See ECONOMIC, Page 3 AP Photo Nadean Dawson of Madera, Calif. is up to her knees in water as she attempts to salvage a lamp from her flooded home. More than 1,400 people were left homeless as a result of violent storms in California yesterday. Viol ent storms batter California LOS ANGELES (AP) - The week's fourth and apparently fiercest storm headed yesterday toward the battered California coast, where residents were digging out of more than 1,000 smashed homes and bracing for more of the wor- st siege of coastal flooding in years. A new storm from the Gulf of Alaska moved toward areas still reeling from heavy rains and pounding tides that sliced through piers and levees and threw tons of sand and debris onto the shore. DAMAGE ESTIMATES topped $35 million in Northern California, and at least seven people had died statewide because of this week's weather, of- ficials said. More than 1,400 people had been for- ced to leave their homes, said Anita Garcia of the state Office of Emergency Services. After Thursday's onslaught from the Pacific Ocean, Gov. George Deuk- mejian declared the counties of Los Angeles, San Diego, Marin, and San Mateo disaster areas. "THE POTENTIAL for additional flooding this Friday, Saturday, and Sunday is great," said forecasters for the National Weather Service, who ex- pected the new storm to be the most in- tense of the series. The brunt of the new storm will hit Southern California with as much as 5 inches of rain, westerly winds 20 to 30 mph and more than 7-foot tides, the weather service said. The Super Bowl isn't expected to be affected by the rain because the Rose Bowl field in Pasadena is covered by a tarpaulin, officials said. he stalks his victim See NATURAL, Page 2 a OK after heart attack From staff and wire reports Famed jazz drummer Buddy Rich, scheduled to perform last night at Hill Auditorium, was listed in satisfactory d condition at University Hospital after suffering a heart attack and undergoing emergency bypass surgery. Rich, 65, suffered what appeared to be a heart attack yesterday morning at the Campus Inn. He entered the main emergency room, accompanied by his road manager, at about 10:30 a.m. suf- fering from severe chest pains. AN X-RAY exam of Rich's heart revealed two of three blood vessels leading to his heart were virtually blocked and emergency surgery was Jazz drummer Buddy Rich was listed in satisfactory condition at University ordered. Hospital last night after suffering a heart attack. Following the four-hour operation, Rich was placed in the intensive care unit. Dr. Marvin Kirsch, head surgeon at the, hospital, said he was "very pleased" with the results of the surgery and said he expects Rich will make a good recovery. Heart muscle damage was minimal, according to a hospital spokesman. The concert, which featured the University of Michigan Jazz Band and the Washtenaw Community College Big Band, as well as the Buddy Rich Band, went on as scheduled. AFTER RICH'S attack concert promoters flew in drummer Danny D'Imperio, who has appeared with Maynard Ferguson and Woody Her- man, as Rich's replacement, according See DRUMMER, Page 2 By CHERYL BAACKE Campus security guards and Ann Ar- bor policemen stormed the Michigan Union yesterday after a Union em- ployee reported seeing someone on the fourth floor with binoculars and a gun. To their surprise, however, all they found was an LSA sophomore armed with a dart gun. LARRY LITOGOT said he was min- ding his own business on the fourth floor of the Michigan Union yesterday mor- ning when he looked out a window and saw someone directing traffic outside. He said he thought it was just an or- dinary traffic jam until an anxious campus security guard approached him and asked Litogot about the dart Sun and binoculars he was carrying. Only then did Litogot realize the security guard and three or four Ann Arbor policement thought he was a real-live killer, wielding a real-live gun. BUT LITOGOT is not a killer - he is just one of the players in South Quad's Assassin game, which began on Jan. 17 with 84 residents from Bush and Gom- berg houses. E.ach "assassin" is equipped with a gun and three darts to aid them in their fight to be the game's lone survivor. LITOGOT said he has spent time at his Union post for the past few days watching other players outside so he could figure out their class schedules and have a better chance of killing them. "We suspected it might be real," said Campus Security Director Walt Stevens. "Those suspicious kinds of things could be quite disastrous." Litogot said he thought the confusion arose because his gun was brown and could have looked real, and that he un- derstood the need to check him out more closely. "They got a little upset," he said, "but they were effective at doing their job." Campus security let Litogot go after he explained the situation. "I had no intention of 'killing' anyone in the Union," Litogot said. "It was just a vantage point." He added he did the same thing last year, but never had any problems - until yesterday. TODAY Something completely different B ROADWAY STARS, top name musical groups, and world-reknowned magicians will be nowhere near East Quad tonight when the Quad's annual No-Talent show takes to the stage at 8 p.m., but it should be an interesting evening. Musicians, actors, and a Not a moving violation I F YOU THINK the Ann Arbor police are tough when it comes to parking tickets, you should try the Boston police. Meter maids ticketed a parked car at least twice while the vehicle's owner was slumped dead over the steering wheel with a puncture wound to his neck, Boston police said. The victim, identified as William Hui, 37, of Boston, had parked on Beacon Street near the Boston Public Garden. "The car had been ticketed twice, once at 10:50 a.m. and once at 2:30 p.m. The door of the car was open and he had the keys to the car in his hand," said police spokesman Brian McMasters. He added that police did not Wavy warmth for wild ones F DORM LIVING is getting you down, consider moving in with some of the animals at the San Diego Zoo. The newest amenity these lucky animals have garnered are waterbeds. And, lest a lion freeze his fur, the beds are, heated to a comfortable 75 to 80 degrees. The first bed was given to a Chinese wild dog which pretended to be pregnant. "She's attached to it," said zoo physiologist Andrew John, Phillips. "It would be very hard to take it away." Fifteen of the 100-pound waterbeds have been given to animals at the zoo including an Indochinese leopard, a spider monkey and her baby. Phillips reports that so far he's heard no com- that the company's policies were racist. Also on this date-in history: " 1910 - University faculty warned women from eating in Chinese restaurants because of the "ill repute" into which the Chinese population of the state had fallen. " 1941 -University President Ruthvens announced that a school of public health would be established at Michigan. * 1965 - Two men's residence halls established escort services for University women after recent assaults near campus. E