Improving medical insurance See Editorial, Page 4 P Si-re igan Ninety-three }Years of Editorial Freedom ?E aiQ Puffy Cloudy with possible snow flurries, and a high near 300. .ol. XCIII, No. 79 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, January 7, 1983 Free Issue Ten Pages Belcher secures support for pot law review By DAN GRANTHAM Mayor Louis Belcher may have gained he votes he needs to assure that the ity Council will place the repeal of the $5 pot law on the city's April ballot. Councilmember Joyce Chesbrough, (R-Fifth Ward), said yesterday that she will vote to put the repeal on the ballot, giving Belcher the seven votes he needs to place the measure before the city's voters in April. COUNCIL approval of the proposal is the only method left for tougher drug law proponents, after a petition drive ailed to raise enough signatures. Sup- porters of the petition drive gathered only 2,000 of the 5,200 signatures needed to place the repeal on the ballot. Chesbrough said she is supporting the measure because she thinks "referen- dums are always a good thing." Chesbrough said she would have See MAYOR, Page 6 Reagan aides say recovery slowmN WASHINGTON (AP) - In an un- commonly pessimistic outlook for 1983, the Reagan administration is predic- ting the slowest - recovery from a recession since World War II, with unemployment sticking above 10 per- cent. The forecast, not publicly released but confirmed yesterday by administration sources, is more bearish than nearly all the major private forecasting firms and marks a reversal from the ad- ministration's decidedly optimistic - but wrong - economic predictions of the prior two years. IN 1981 and 1982, the Reagan ad- ministration had been ridiculed by private economists and the financial community for making rosy predictions beyond the range of reasonable expec- tation. this time, President Reagan's new chief economist, Martin Feldstein, has insisted that the administration issue an honest forecast to regain its economic credibility. The forecast, prepared as part of the fiscal 1984 budget plan President Reagan will send Congress Jan. 31, predicts the economy - after adjusting for inflation - wil grow at an anemic rate of only 1.4 percent on average for all of 1983, compared with 1982. By comparison, first-year recoveries from the previous seven post-war recessions typically have shown growth rates of 4 percent or more. BECAUSE economic growth is ex- pected to be so slow, unemployment is down predicted to decline only slightly from its current level, now at a 42-year high of 10.8 percent. At his news conference Wednesday night, Reagan said the economy "is getting better, not getting worse," but he conceded unemployment would be slow to recede. According to the forecast, the jobless rate will remain above 10 percent by the fall of 1983 and above 9 percent in the presidential campaign season in the fall of 1984. The unemployment rate was 7.4 per- cent wehn Reagan took office. Accor- ding to the new administration forecast, unemployment will not recede to 7 percent until 1988. THE ECONOMIC outlook suggests the administration has abandoned its promise that it can promote strong economic growth, lower unem- ployment, keep inflation down and balance the budget at the same time, as its 1981-82 forecasts had indicated. As for inflation, the administration expects it to remain around 5 percent in 1983, about the same as in 1982. The slow-growth forecast means future budget deficits, which Reagan once promised to eliminate by 1983, will swell to record proportions, in each of the next five years unless Reagan "abandons his opposition to tax in- creases and military spending cuts. Of- ficials now say the red ink will grow from more than $200 billion in 1984 to See ADMINISTRATION, Page 6 AP Photo Job rush * A crowd estimated at 7,000 pushes toward the door of Chicago's Washington Park field house yesterday to apply for 3,800 temporary jobs being offered by the city. IV I Dow hits another all-i From UPI and AP NEW YORK- The Dow Jones industrial average surged 26.03 points to an all-time high of 1,070.92 yesterday in a stock market buying stampede that prompted analysts to say the recession has ended. Most other market barometers also hit new highs in the 129 million-share trading surge that started with speculators and ended with cash-laden institutions buying frantically to avoid missing the bull market of the 1980s. The Dow Jones average of 30 stocks, which eased 1.19 Wednesday, now has climbed 294 points since hit- ting a 27-month low of 776.92 on Aug. 12 last year. THE BROADER-based New York Stock Exchange index surged 1.95 to an all-time high of 83.71 and the price of an average share increased 79 cents. Stan- 'U'security nabs dorm thieves in 'W.Quad courtyard By DAN GRANTHAM By what could be described as a stroke of luck, campus security and Ann Arbor police were able to ap- prehend four suspects in connection Owith two Wednesday night dorm rob- beries. The first robbery took place at South Quad a little after 8 p.m., according to Ann Arbor Police Sergeant Harold Tin- sey. Tinsey said a dorm resident saw two men running from a room with some "goods" and began to chase them. ALTHOUGH the student was unable to catch the men, he recovered some 0music tapes the thieves had dropped. The student returned the tapes to the residents who had been robbed. The victims then alerted campus security and the police. * * * The second robbery took place at Students about 9:30 p.m. at West Quad. Tinsey good star See 'U', Page 6 dard & Poor's 500-stock index climbed 3.31 to 145.27, a new record. Advances routed declines 1,431-305 among the 1,956 issues traded at 4 p.m. EST. The Big Board volume of 129,410,000 shares, up from the 95,390,000 traded Wednesday, was the ninth heaviest in the NYSE's 190-year history and the biggest since a record 149,385,480 changed hands on Nov.4. SINCE MANY basic industry stocks scored big gains, "I would have to think the market is saying the economy has turned the corner," Newton Zinder, E.F. Hutton vice president, said. "With car sales improving recently, housing starts picking up and retail sales a little better, it is clear to me the economy has turned to the upside," said Harold Ehrlich of Bernstein-Macauley, which ime high manages $2.7 billion in pension fund money. Basic industry stocks such as chemicals and metals were especially strong, which many market watchers saw as a sign that professional investors believed recovery would soon begin to spread through the economy. Oil stocks, battered the past two years, were also particularly strong as investors went bargain hun- ting. Also, some traders were hopeful Saudi Arabia would cut production to bring stability to the in- dustry. Composite volume of NYSE issues listed on all U.S. exchanges and over the counter at 4 p.m. totaled 143,541,300 shares, up from the 108,817,300 traded Wednesday. ' profs play central roleitn high court battle LANSING (UPI) - The new governor of Michigan, the old governor of Michigan, the Michigan Supreme Court, and two University law professors are about to embroil them- selves in a bitter legal battle. The latest word on the upcoming fight comes from two fronts: The first from Lansing, where the state Supreme Court yesterday scheduled a rare Saturday morning hearing on whether it should give immediate consideration to the proposed ouster of Justice Dorothy Comstock Riley. GOV. JAMES Blanchard wants Riley out and University Law School Prof. Wade McCree to replace her. The second comes from Traverse City, where former Gov. William Milliken has announced that he intends to intervene legally on the behalf of Riley, his embattled appointee. Milliken said he wants University Law School Prof. James White to represent him in the upcoming battle. Riley was appointed last month by former Gov. Milliken to replace the late Justice Blair Moody Jr., who died last fall shortly after winning election to a new, eight-year term. MILLIKEN argued that Riley can serve until after the next general elec- tion in November 1984. Blanchard and Kelley said her right to serve expired with Moody's old term at the end of last year. White could not be reached last night for comment on the case which indirec- tly pits him against McCree, a fellow faculty member. McCree has not of- ficially been asked to replace Riley should she be removed, but said his name is being "tossed about" by the new administration. Tomorrow's 10:30 a.m. hearing, which was requested by Riley's attor- neys, will be limited to the issue of whether a "quo warranto" suit filed by Attorney General Frank Kelley should be yanked from the Michigan Court of Appeals and taken up by the Supreme Court on an expedited basis. BOTH KELLEY and Gov. Blanchard have urged rapid action on the issue, but Riley herself has opposed it, arguing the suit lacks legal merit and has not been properly argued at, the lower court level. Both sides likely will be given a half hour to present their points of view. Riley has so far refrained from par- ticipating in high court decisions relating to the "quo warranto" challenge MILLIKEN yesterday said he has requested permission from the Michigan Court of Appeals to make a "friend of the court" argument on See COURT, Page 6 Daily Photo by SCOTT ZOLTON and book rush go through the ritual of purchasing textbooks at Ulrich's yesterday. As usual, students are anxious to get a rt on this term's assignments. TODAY Sex through the ages F YOU THOUGHT books about sex were a phenomenon of the '80s, think again. A century ago, when reaching out to touch someone usually brought a slap, a prominent doctor went on a six-week honeymoon and fashioned a book on sex that touched all bases. It's a far cry from the explicit sex stories and pictures commonplace today, but it was apparently an instant success. Dr. John Kellogg, who founded the flaked cereal industry in Battle the Republican party for the presidency he would give up Reeling for dollars TWO HAINES CITY, FLA. fishermen didn't catch any fish Monday, but they did pull in a $1200 40-by-30 foot red and yellow helium balloon. Madge McDonald and her son Allan were fishing on quiet Lake Marion when the pair saw the blimp-like balloon splash near shore. They maneuvered across the water and dragged the sagging, soggy thing aboard. Neither knew exactly what they had, but they telephoned a radio station and discovered the $1,200 balloon had been the subject of a search that even- tually involved the Air Force. The 40-by-30-foot helium- Not guilty due to paperwork F ORGET TO REGISTER Fido? Chugging down a beer on the street? You're breaking the law in San Jose, but don't worry-paperwork may well come to your rescue. At least 350 people who haven't paid fines for violating city or- dinances can expect legal pardons without penalties, Santa Clara County court officials said. "Something had to give," said Pat Tralongo, acting court administrator. "We had a backlog, and we had to set priorities. Our priorities are on the heavy violations. We just can't do the rest." The problem is a scarcity of clerks, partly the result from Por- the Republican party for the presidency he would give up his post. He added that he would not quit his job to cam- paign for the nomination. Also on this date in history: * 1910-University women announced they wanted an of- ficial headgear carrying out the same class distinction as the men's toques. Most favored a trim little tam o'shanter. " 1923-Ignac Paderewski, Polish master pianist, per- formed before a capacity crowd at Hill Auditorium. * 1955-A poll asked University students what they would change if they could change one thing about the University. A majority of the students responded that they like the Unriversity iust the way it w as. Q .1 II i i