Ninety- Three Years of Editorial Freedom E Sir gau E ai1 Awesome It'll be mostly sunny today with a high near 30. Vol. XCIII, No. 110 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, February 12, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages Historic blacks highlight civil rights seminar Sharon resigns amid strife By SHARON SILBAR Last night, Rosa Parks set the record straight. The reason she did not get up out of her bus seat Dec. 1, 1955 was not because her feet were tired from a day's worth of shopping, as many people believe. It was much simpler than that: There were three empty seats. PARKS WAS one of the featured guests at a campus celebration of Black History Month entitled "The Civil Rights Movement in Retrospect: Looking Backward to Move Forward," held at the business school's Hale Auditorium. "On the third stop after I boarded, several people did not have seats," Parks said. "There was only one white man. The driver wanted four of us (blacks sitting in 'black' seats) to get up, leaving three vacant seats. When the others stood up and moved to the aisle, I moved to the window," she said. "The bus driver threatened to call the police, and I said 'Well, you may do 10 that.'" THOSE WORDS made Parks famous in the history of the civil rights movement. Her action gave courage to countless blacks across the nation to stand up - or sit down - for their rights. Parks was joined by E.D. Nixon, an organizer of the Montgomery, Ala. bus boycott, and Wade McCree, a Univer- sity law professor, both of whom are well known and highly respected mem- bers of the black community. McCree said that he is worried about the future of black Americans. "My ob- servations tell me that we are not working hard enough," he said.. "The apparent attitude of the current national administration to civil rights is color blind. Without a restoration of civil rights, an awakened awareness, and an improvement in the economy, I expect little progress," Mc Cree said. BEFORE THE speakers began, a member of the audience borrowed the microphone and led the more than 150 people in the audience in the singing of spiritual songs like 'This Little Light of See CIVIL, Page 3 Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL Rosa Parks explains her 1955 bus ride that became a historic example of racial discrimination at a campus celebration of Black History Month held at the business school's Hale Auditorium last night. From AP and UPI TEL AVIV, Israel - Ariel Sharon, assailing the Beirut massacre report as a "mark of Cain on our foreheads," resigned as Israeli defense minister yesterday but officials said he would remain in the Cabinet. Within hours of informing Prime Minister Begin of his decision to resign and end a three-day struggle to keep his job, Sharon appeared before the Israeli Bar Association and denounced the Israeli inquiry into the Sept. 16-18 massacre at the Sabra and Chatila Palestinian refugee camps. "I CANNOT accept, even for a minute... that clause (in the report) that deals with the indirect respon- sibility (of Israel) for the events of Sabra and Chatila," he said. "Judge for yourself how that phrase will ring in the ears of every person, in every language, everywhere on the face of the earth. It will be a mark of Cain on our foreheads for generations." The commission that probed the massacre by Christian Lebanese militiamen ruled that Sharon bore "personal responsibility" for the slaughter of hundreds of people at the, two camps in west Beirut. CABINET MINISTERS and senior Israeli officials said Sharon would hand over the defense post to Begin tomorrow but would remain in the cabinet as a minister without portfolio for an unspecified period of time. "He is only resigning as defense minister and not from the gover- nment," said Ehud Omert, a -parliamentary member from Begin's Likud coalition. All indicators pointed to Prime Minister Menachem Begin eventually asking Moshe Arens, Israel's am- Sharon ... chooses to resign Wholesale prices take plunge From AP and UPI WASHINGTON (UPI) - Wholesale prices fell a record 1 percent in January, with a sharp decline in fuel costs accompanied by price breaks for food and a wide range of other goods, the Labor Department reported yester- day. The unexpectedly steep drop in the Producer Price Index was the most St-^e the government first measured wholesale price changes in 1947. IF SUSTAINED for 12 months, the rate of decline would be a seasonally adjusted 11.9 percent. dubbed "double Riley will keep seat. in state high court deadl ock LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan Supreme Court yesterday deadlocked three-to-three on whether Justice Dorothy Comstock Riley should con- tinue to serve on the high court. Because of the deadlock she will remain on the bench. Justices Mennen Williams, Thomas Kavanagh and Michael Cavanagh, all Democrats, voted to oust her. Justices James Brickley and James Ryan, Republicans, and independent Justice Charles Levin voted to keep her. THE RULING does not resolve the constitutional issues presented by the case. The court went through three weeks of agonizing deliberation in the case which dealt with tough constitutional questions as well as a sensitive per- sonal one - the right of a fellow justice to continue serving. See RILEY, Page 2 digit deflation" by one department economist. The White House claimed policy credit. Spokesman Larry Speakes said the new report was a "striking confir- mation of the progress that has been made in reducing the underlying rate of inflation. "This is good news and indicates that the administration and the Federal Reserve, working on the same wavelength, achieved these-results'". Speakes said. CHANGES in wholesale prices nor- mally are reflected later at the retail level, making the latest decline a prospective bit of bright news for con- sumers. The index for all energy prices for dealers was down 4.2 percent. Home heating oil was 9.7 percent less expen- sive, a benefit of a relatively mild win- ter on top of a steady slackening in the world oil price. Gasoline prices were down 3.3 per- cent, although most of the change was for December, not January. EVEN .previously skyrocteting natural gas prices were down 2.7 per- cent. Inflation also disappeared for food prices, down 0.2 percent, and for capital equipment, from factory machinery to earthmoving equipment, which was down 0.1 percent. The fact that capital equipment prices are declining will have a long- range effect on the nation's overall in- flation rate, said Georgia State Univer- sity economist Donald Ratajczak. SINCE THE new year is already im- proving on,1982's&.price ..deceleration, most forecasters are expected to moderate their outlook to show 1983 en- ding with a business inflation rate even lower than last year's 3.5 percent. bassador to Washington, to accept the defense post. ISRAEL RADIO said Begin preferred Arens, who would keep the prime minister in good standing with his right- wing constituency. Arens also is well in- formed about Reagan administration policies and might help ease the strains on Israel's relations with the United States. A remote possibility would be Ezer Weizman, who resigned the Defense Ministry in 1980 with harsh words for Begin's leadership. Though Weizman has remained popular in retirement, Begin is understood to reject the idea of his return unless he retracts his criticism. Begin also could keep the defense See SHARON, Page 3 Closing of Downtown Club could leave poor homeless BCHERYL BAACKE Lights and heat go out Tuesday for the remaining residents of the Downtown Club, one of Ann Arbor's few low-income housing facilities. William Hall, part-owner of the 68-room building on the corner of Fourth and Huron, said utility companies are shutting off power to the dilapidated building Tuesday because the rent taken for the past few months has not been enough to pay the bills. HALL SAID HE filed notice in early January ordering all residents to move out, but the present occupants "just didn't have the inertia" to do so. He says that most of them can afford to move somewhere else. The Downtown Club has been at the center of a heated debate over what responsibility the city should bear toward its low-income residents. The building's current owners wanted to close the facility, which has been cited for a number of city code violations, because they cannot afford to bring it up to standards. A GROUP OF local businessmen wants to buy the building, which county officials say is worth around $425,000, and renovate it for office space, Hall said. But City Councilmember Lowell Peterson (D-1st Ward) opposes the sale of the house for business use. He and other members of an ad hoc citizens' committee have been working for eight months to keep the Downtown Club open as a low-income housing facility. See LOW-INCOME, Page 2 Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL The Downtown Club cuts off all services Tuesday, amid controversy over its future use. It has provided housing for low-income groups; now, it may be converted into business offices. TODAY E.T. go home ! E.T. THE LEATHERY little movie star, should get lost in space for good. say two men who are sick and the two that they were infringing on the studio's copyright. The shirts had the E.T. symbol of the creature's glowing finger extended, while the responding finger of the little boy was turned around in an obvious gesture of "digital disdain," Deutsch said. He and his partner are now star- ting a newsletter for people who are sick of sensationalist hype for profits. "I've been chow-chow-chowed until my paws are falling off. I'm sick of the guy from Jack-in-the- Box. I'm tired of Valley Girls and computer games," Deut- sch said. The newsletter may come out quarterly and is "going to entail the unfair media blitz, the unfair lottery is a pie in the sky and people who can least afford it are the ones trying to strike it rich," Joe Fletcher said. Fletcher propoed manufacturing lottery tickets from pressed beef, pressed fruit, or protein wafers similiar to those used for communion. "You could lick off the num- bers," he said. But some ticket manufacturers found the idea hard to swallow. "Maybe Fletcher would like to tell us how to go about making edible tickets," said Steve Green- field, a representative of Scientific Games Co., of Atva, Ga., ticket markers for the lottery, which began last fall. Edible tickets could cost up to 10 cents each, he said, and by about 3,000,000 mourners. " 1973 - The first 116 American prisoners of war were released by North Vietnam. " 1976 - University Vice President of Academic affairs Frank Rhodes announced the appointment of Billy Frye as Dean of LSA. " 1957 - University figures showed a male - female student population ratio of 2 to 1, with the men in the majority. I I i