Ninety- Three Years of Editorial Freedom P Sit tttlu Looking good February gets off to a good start with partly sunny skies and a high in the mid-30s. Ll j X- '111 Kl-.. If7- S *d/'__. _: L"an n L . ] . . _e. ... _ . --- 1 PVOL ALM, -NO. IUU C.opyrignT i3, Ine Micnigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, February 1, 1983 Ten Cents Ten Panes t .. ... , ".. .+yc 'U' stake in South Africa: Hold stocks or divest? By JIM SPARKS February figures to be a trying month kor the faculty Financial Affairs Com- mittee. Beginning today, they take up the volatile question of whether to maintain the University's investments in corporations with operations in South Africa. In today's meeting, the committee will discuss a proposal recommending that the University keep its holdings, despite a new state law requiring divestiture. COMMITTEE chairman Thomas Gies, who drafted the proposal, said, "We don't have to ignore social concer- ns, but we can't (invest) solely on that." The committee's resolution is scheduled to come before the faculty senate Feb. 14, and then go on to the Regents. Gies, a Business Administration professor, said the committee will only recommend the best investment strategy for the University, and will not deal with the legal question of whether the state has the right to dictate how the Regents should invest. ONE OF THE main dividing lines between supporters and opponents of divestment is a policy the University adopted in 1978, asking companies with South African affiliates to "Work toward the enhancement of political, economic and social rights for their employees in South Africa." Since that time, the Unviersity has divested from one company for failing to comply with the policy. The policy, written by General Motors Corporation board member Leon Sullivan, lets the University "stay up on the front line and tell these people: look, we don't like some of the things you're doing," Gies said. See 'U,"page 6 Congress '84 b of udget Daily Photo by WENDY GOULD The sky's not falling This workman is busy trying to keep up with the repairs being made to the roof of East Quad. Sick dorm residents say dorm food is the culprit WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan yesterday sent Congress an $848.5 billion budget 'freeze' for 1984, calling it "urgently needed, strong medicine," but Democrats attacked its deep social cuts and large defense spending increase. r "The bad news is it's the same 'stay the course' budget they've had the past two years," said House Budget Com- mittee Chairman James Jones (D- Okla).. REPUBLICAN and Democratic congressional leaders predicted Congress will reduce Reagan's defense spending increase and reject his plan for $146 billion in standby tax in- creases to take effect in 1985 to reduce budget deficits. Two new taxes would include a $5-a-barrel levy on oil, in- creasing gasoline prices by 12 cents a gallon, and surcharge of 1 percent on taxable income. But they also agreed the economic projections in the budget are not overly optimistic and, for that reason, the document will not be totally discarded by Congress as the. 1983 Reagan Budget was. THE NEW budget would make deep cuts in domestic spending, by '$29.7 federal budget would increase by $43.3 billion. Reagan called this spending plan a "common sense strategy," and ap- pealed for congressional approval. "The stage is set; a recovery to vigorous, sustainable, noninflationary" growth is imminent," he said. By JACKIE YOUNG Queasy stomachs may not be unusual for students who eat in dorm cafeterias, but a rash of intestinal upsets at West Quad last week set off rumors that some of the food was definitely out of the ordinary. While University officials said that the outbreak of a flu-like illness was not related to the dinners served last Thur- sday, some dorm residents said the large number of students suffering from the mysterious malady led them to believe they had been stricken with food poisoning. UNIVERSITY officials estimated that 50 to 60 West Quad residents and 16 Barbour and Newberry residents, who ate food prepared at West Quad, fell ill between Thursday and Friday. The 35 residents interviewed Saturday by the University were suffering from vomiting and diarrhea. But University sanitarian John Kowalczk, from the Department for Environmental and Occupational See ILL, Page 2 N. Reagan ... hoping for support IN FACT, the budget assumes that the economy already has begun to recover from the recession, and will stay healthy for years to come. At the same time, he forecast that unem- ployment would remain above 10 per- cent until well into 1984. To keep deficits from rising higher, the president called for a freeze on federal pay and pensions for a year, as well on overall spending on hundreds of domestic programs. He asked Congress to pare programs such as See CONGRESS, Page 6 V.P. Overberger resigns top 'U' research post By BARBARA MISLE Vice President for Research Charles Overberger will announce his resignation today after 11 years on the University administration. Overberger, one of the nation's leading organic chemists, will leave his top-level post to raise funds to build the University's new Chemical Science Building and devote more time to his research work with graduate students. "I HAVE HAD the job for 11 years. I was a senior executive officer and it is a long time," Overberger said last night. "I'll miss it, but it isn't as if I'm saying good-bye to all my friends because I will see them." Overberger has kept up with his research in macromolecular chemistry throughout his term as vice president, Ibut at 62, his workload has become too time consuming. "With three jobs you spend a lot of time working and it is not that I didn't enjoy it; I wouldn't have done it. Now I will have more time for my personal life." UNIVERSITY President Harold Shapiro reluctantly accepted Over- berger's resignation and said the ad- ministration will "greatly miss his leadership as an executive officer." 'Until a succesor is appointed by a University search committee, Over- berger will continue to work. Overberger received the prestigious Horace N. Potts medal last November for his achievements as a scientist and his academic and professional leader- ship. Overberger joins Pierre and Marie Curie, Alexander Graham Bell and Albert Einstein, all of whom received the Potts medal. Before coming to the University in 1967 as a Chemistry Professor, Over- berger was a chemistry department head and dean of sciences as the Polytechnic Institute of New York. He received his Ph.D from the University of Illinois in 1944. OVERBERGER was active in the fir- st public debates over the issue of recombinant DNA and a strong suppor- ter of increasing government regulations on research to insure higher safety standards for human sub- jects. Bulimic expelled fromZTA house By ROB FRANK Last Saturday afternoon, having M aked her bags the previous evening, arilyn Kilinski moved out of the Zeta Tau Alpha sorority house. It had been her home since September. Kilinski did not ask to leave the sorority house; she was told to leave the previous Tuesday. The reason: Marilyn Kilinski has bulimia. The disease is a psychological one, similar to anorexia, in which the in- dividual "binges 'and purges," by eating large meals and then throwing up. Kilinski, an LSA sophomore, said she "kind of got it" in the spring of last year after pledging ZTA the previous fall. Though she knew she could not stop the binging and purging, Kilinski did manage to slow the disease near the end of last year when she was only throwing up "once every few days," compared to several times a day during the first weeks of school. Kilinski thought she was improving, but Sue Hewitt, president of the See SORORITY, Page 2 Marilyn Kilinski (inset) was asked to leave her sorority, Zeta Tau Alpha, due to the fact she has bulimia. TODAY Dally coup ODAY's issue of the Daily marks the first produced under the direction of the 1983 editors. They are: Editor- in-Chief Barry Witt, a junior history major from High- land Park, Ili.; Managing Editor Janet Rae, a junior po- litical science major from Manhattan Beach, Calif.; CoOpinion Page Editor Kent Redding, a junior political science major from Fort Wayne, Ind.; Co-Opinion Page Editor David Spak, a bachelor of general studies junior from Northfield, Ill.; University Editor Fannie Weinstein, a sophomore major from Warren. a r. And more ... A new business staff also takes over at the Daily today: Business Manager Sam G. Slaughter IV; a sophomore political science major from Birmingham; Sales Manager Meg Gibson, a junior English and economics major from Winnetka, Ill.; Classifieds Manager Pam Gillery, a junior political science major from Columbus, Ohio; Operations Manager Laurie Iczkovitz, a sophomore communications major from Birmingham; Finance Manager Mark M. Horita; a sophomore interdisciplinary engineering major ,- A_ ,-fL._. n:.... TIl - T _)._ -T-- t- T. f J, stalking his victims for his hall's "assassin" game, in which they object is to "kill" all the other players with an innocent dart shot and remain the only participant "alive." After the Daily ran a story on the incident on Saturday, United Press International, the Associated Press, and Detroit television stations picked up on it. The Ann Arbor Police Department responded yesterday morning with a press release condemning the game. "If the Police Depar- tment receives a radio run 'man with a gun' and on arrival are suddenly confronted with an individual wearing s ski mask and carrying what appears to be a gun," the release said, "the responding officer could construe it to be a life thrvatonini citatinn and tiake the annronriate measures to members of the Youth International Party (YIP). Also on this date in history: " 1967 - A panel of faculty members voted to recommend that the faculty should remain neutral in the Cinema Guild pornography case. Four members of the board of directors of the film group had been charged with showing a por- nographic film, "Flaming Creatures"; " 1969 - Washtenaw County Sheriff Douglas Harvey failed to appear for a scheduled debate of the county jail's living conditions. The Department had assured students that if the sheriff was able to appear, someone from the department would be there; . 1971 - Congres hean an immediate investigatinn intn I I