Ninety- Three Years ofe Editorial Freedom I E LIE I!IUU !3IaiQ Predictable Once again, the skies will be over- cast and the temperature should reach 37. Vol. XCIII, No. 113 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor Michigan - Wednesday, February 16, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages Chalk one up for East Quad artist By CARL WEISER These days, East Quad's Hinsdale House is looking more like an art gallery than a dorm. During the past week, the house's second floor has acquired Van Gogh's "Starry Night," Turner's "Sunrise," and Munch's "The Scream." Well, not exactly. THE "PAINTINGS" ARE actually chalk reproductions drawn by Adolpho Lim, a 19-year-old LSA sophomore and East Quad resident. Over the past two weeks he has done 16 reproductions of famous paintings and album covers and drawn two original works on the slate memo boards on East Quad dormroom doors. "I do it for fun," said Lim. "I also want people to enjoy them." The chalk artist added that it makes him "feel good" when passersby'stop and look at the drawings. See EAST QUAD, Page 2 High Court backtraeks; Hinsdale Hall in East Quad is decorated with this Adolfo rendition of a Split Enz album cover. __ _ . Reagan budget to slash By BARBARA MISLE President Reagan's 1984 proposed budget would virtually wipe out finan- cial aid programs for middle income students, University officials say. The president's program would also cut the number of University Pell Grant recipients by one-third, but would in- crease the number of work study students by 35 percent, the officials said. THE OUTLOOK for 1983-84, however, is positive and funding will stay much the same as this year, said Harvey Grotrian, the University's director of financial aid. (See related story.) If approved,the 1984 budget proposal would collapse three federal programs into one "Self-Help Grant' rogli; which would increase the amouru.ef money a student could receive, but decrease the number of students eligible for the grants. The budget calls for eliminating the Pell Grant, the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant, and the National Direct Student Loan. REAGAN'S PROPOSALS are based on a "self-help" principle for higher education, which would require studen- ts to pay 40 percent of their own income - a minimum of $800 - to qualify for federal funds. The program's purpose is to encourage students to pay for their own college education and turn to the federal government as a last resort. But financial aid officials aren't too happy about it. "The neediest student will receive less support, the low to middle income student will receive no support, and the student who would have been eligible to receive a five percent NDSL will be moved into a nine percent (interest rate) GSL," said Grotrian. UNDER THE REAGAN proposal, GSL requirements would be stiffened. Current GSL guidelines require a student whose family income is above $30,000 to pass a needs test which con- hders family income and size, the -.The number of students a family has in college, and the costs of attending that college. The Reagan plan would extend the requirements to applicants whose family income is under $30,000. But the proposal will have "tough sledding . at best," in Congress said Thomas Butts, the University's Washington lobbyist. THE NEGATIVE effect of Reagan's proposal would be on the total number of students who will be able to qualify for federal funds. The 3,600 University students who now receive Pell Grants would be cut by 1,200 in 1984. The tougher standards for the self- help grant will make it difficult for students from families with incomes of $20,000 to $40,000 a year, to qualify for the federal funds in 1984, Grotrian said. The self-help grant would also '84 ai al require that a student pay at least 40 percent of his tuition from family in- come; loans, or scholarships before he or she could receive federal money. T HE CURRENT federal aid program only considers a student's financial See PROPOSED, Page 2 ousts, From staff and wire reports LANSING - The Michigan Supreme Court, in a surprise reconsideration of its stalemate of four days ago, voted 4-2 yesterday to oust Justice Dorothy Com- stock Riley from the high court. The decision came after a rare evening session by a court which had deadlocked 3-3 last Friday on the com- plex legal matter of Riley's right to succeed the late Justice Blair Moody on the court. THE COURT handed down its decision about 9:30 p.m. after recon- vening on its own earlier in the day. Former Gov. William Milliken named the 58-year-old appellate judge to the court to fill a vacancy created by the death of Moody at Thanksgiving. Milliken has maintained he had the right to fill the spot even though Moody, a Democrat, was to have begun a new eight-year term in January. Governor Blanchard believed the spot was his to fill. Voting to oust Riley were Chief Justice Mennen Williams and Justices Thomas Kavanagh, Michael Cavanaugh and Charles Levin. All are Democrats except Levin, who is an in- dependent. VOTING TO keep Riley on the court were Justices James Ryan and James Brickley, both Republicans. Levin had voted with them in last week's lengthy decision involving five separate opinions. Unversity Law Prof. James White, who defended Milliken in the case, said he was amazed that the court recon- sidered its decision. "As far as I know," he said, "there has been no petition on the part of any party for reconsideration." SINCE THE Attorney General did not ask for a reconsideration, he said, the court's change of decision is "highly unusual." Gov. Blanchard said he was "sur- prised" but refused to comment on a possible replacement for Riley. Riley, Levin ... changes vote in Riley case Outlook good for '83 The financial aid outlook for 1983-84 is better than officials expected, and students and lobby groups can take the credit for it, experts say. Student protests and lobbying last spring helped increase the amount of proposed federal financial aid for 1982- 83, said Thomas Butts, the University's Washington lobbyist. This extra federal allocation was used as the base for the 1983-84 aid plan. Three federally funded programs were expected to be eliminated in 1983, but they'll be spared for at least one more year, Butts said. Pell Grants and National Direct Student Loans will continue at the same level ($1.4 billion and $178.6 million respectively) but Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants will decrease from $73.7 million to $60 million in 1983-84. The Work Study program will increase from .$528 million to $540 million. All programs, however, have steadily decreased since 1981. The State Student Incentive Grant program, which matches funds with the Michigan Competitive Scholarship Program and other state aid programs, will be cut 19 percent' The eligibility requirements, however, for Guaranteed Student Loans will stay the same in 1983. -Barbara Misle Computer facility set to open in Union basement "I did not expect it," said Blanchard, who was at a United Auto Workers testimonial dinner in Detroit at the time of the decision. "I'm sure it was a dif- ficult decision for the court." WHEN ASKED if he believed the court was proper in ruling Riley off the bench, he said only, "The decision speaks for itself." Frederick Buesser, Riley's attorney, said he was "stunned" by the "decision. "I am stunned that the court, having made a decision, has now apparently unmade it." Although he had not spoken with Riley, he said she took "the news with more grace than the court did it." The action came without warning to Riley or her attorneys, he noted, adding she learned of it after dinner. Buesser said he did not know whether any further action is possible. Students pulling plug on arcades By LAURA FARRELL The sirens, buzzers, and "whrrs" of video games echo through Ann Arbor's arcades these days. Strobe lights flash, but not on crowds of people. The "video craze" is subsiding, and it shows. The once packed video rooms are no longer bursting with customers, and local arcade managers say that the decade's biggest fad thus far is fading fast. WITH TODAY'S DISMAL economy, many students say they just can't af- ford to spend quarters on video games. "I'd rather save my quarters for laundry machines than to spend them See STUDENTS, Page 3 By MICHAEL CASTLE A new computing station due to open in the Michigan Union immediately af- ter break will help thin out the crowds at other campus computing areas. The $230,000 facility, located in the basement of the Union where the student bowling alley used to be, tentatively is scheduled to open February 28. "OUR TARGET date (for opening) is the first day after spring break," said Dennis Jaworski, supervisor of com- puter operations at North University Building Services (NUBS). But he said there is a possibility construction will not be completed by then. The station, which will be about the same size as the one at NUBS, has been dubbed UNYN ("Union"). Al Emery, Computing Center deputy director, said the four-letter code, which is not a direct acronym for anything, was selec- ted over such suggestions as STUD (Student Union), USSR (Union Service Station Region), and BOWL (in memory of the bowling alley the station replaces). Emery said the completed station will house about 35 video terminals, six paper terminals, and 12 keypunches, along with graphics terminals, line printers, and a card reader. SOME OF the new equipment will be moved to UNYN from NUBS, Emery said, but most of the terminals are new. He said more equipment may be in- stalled later. Although the available services will be similar to those at NUBS, Jaworski said the atmosphere will be more in- viting at UNYN. The station was designed to preserve the Union's 1930's architecture and get rid of the "basement feeling" he said students using NUBS complain about. Bricks have been removed to reveal long-forgotten windows facing a West Quad courtyard and the natural wood trim and arches of the bowling alley have been preserved. "WE'VE BEEN working hard to make it a nice place to be," Jaworski said. "I don't think anybody is going to feel like they're in a basement here." UNYN has been designed to be com- pletely accessible to the handicapped, Jaworski said. Disabled students will be given keys to West Quad's Cam- bridge House elevator to get in and out of the station. Other students will enter the station See UNION, Page 3 Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Paul Bass, playing Scramble, is one of the die-hard video game addicts who continues to patronize arcades despite a decrease in their popularity. TODAY- Where am I? THE FORMER geography department at the University of Michigan may not have put Ann Arbor on the map, but at least most of the students know where the city is.David Helgren, a geography professor at the University of Miami, Fla., sur- Central America." Helgren said be believes his results would be duplicated at most any college. "This is the sort of stuff we don't teach in the University," he said. "This is the sort of thing that one should learn (along) with the multiplication tabbles." A kiss is still a kiss complaining about aches in their backs and lower necks and they're constantly getting headaches." The kissers, both actors, were attempting to further their careers by besting the previous kissing record, listed in the Guiness Book of World Records as five days and 12 hours. DeLorean, 20, and Kane, 24, began their kiss-a-thon Feb. 8 in the window of the Papillon Boutique and Gallery in ShermonOaks, Calif. They alternately sat, stood, and reclined while kissing, changed clothes each day, and took one five-minute break per hour. "My lips are swollen, but otherwise I feel very well," Kane said Monday, moments better acquainted. To attend, every woman had to wear an emblem which represented her hobby. Also on this date in history: " 1913-The University faculty voted to abolish the Juinor Hop, calling it a relic of the past. " 1953-Eighty Michigan lawmakers visited the Univer- sity on an inspection tour. It was the first such visit in 30 years. " 1973-Several hundred people gathered in the Fishbowl for the first annual Michigan Daily bubble gum blowing contest I $ I