Ninety- Three Years of Editorial Freedom he Sit i aI Reactionary Back to Michigan's par today. Cloudy with a chance of snow today and tonight's highs will be in the upper 20s and lows will hit the lower 20s. Vol. XCIII, No. 123 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan- Thursday, March 10, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages EPA chief Burford resigns Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Art school students rallied on the Diag yesterday in a silent symbolic protest Committee. The students plan to march on Monday evening to the Michigan of the proposed 25 percent budget cut recommended by the Budget Priorities Union where a public hearing for the school will be held. Ar studentsA stage silen protest From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Anne McGill Bur- ford resigned as chief of the troubled Environmental Protection Agency yesterday, while the White House an- nounced it would release all documents congressional investigators had demanded in their investigations of the EPA. Despite the resignation and President Reagan's agreement to surrender the documents, House investigators said their inquiries into EPA management of the $1.6 billion "superfund" would continue. Rep. Mike Synar (D-Okla.), chair- man of one subcommittee investigating charges of mismanagement and political manipulation of the fund, was asked if Burford's resignation meant an end to the EPA investigations. "IT MAY in the media, but it won't in the Congress," he said. "Burford's departure is not the issue. The issue is the operation of the Environmental Protection Agency and the implemen- tation of our environmental laws." The resignation of. the EPA chief came as chairman of House in- vestigating subcommittees exerted new pressure for release of the documents, which Burford had con- tinually refused to supply, leading to a contempt of Congress charge against her amid a widening investigation of the agency. Burfor'd said she resigned "with great regret, but it is now clear that my resignation is essential to termination of the controversy and confusion generated by the outstanding dispute over congressional access to certain EPA documentary materials." "WITHOUT AN end to these unfor- tunate difficulties, EPA is disabled from implementing its mandate and you are distracted from pursuing the critical domestic and international goals of your administration," she ad- ded. President Reagan, noting he accep- ted her decision "with great regret," By CHERYL BAACKE About 300 art school students and faculty held a silent rally yesterday as part' of a visual statement protesting proposed budget cuts for the school. The protesters wore signs saying "art" and mar- ched silently from the Diag to Regents Plaza, the Museum of Art, and then back to the Diag. At each stop they lined up and a student with a large replica of an X-acto knife "cut out" every fourth row of people, symbolizing the 25 percent cut recommended by a key University budget committee. "THE SILENCE" is a symbolic gesture of not being around anymore if they cut us," said art school sophomore Frank Young. In addition to cutting $350,000 from the art school's . budget, the Budget Priorities Committee recommen- ded the school cut its undergraduate enrollment frm the current 571 students to about 300 students, cut the I &: number of faculty members from 37 to 22, and move to enroll more non-art majors in the school's classes. Both the Budget Priorities Committee and the sub- committee which initially reviewed the school noted in their reports that the art school is not visible to the rest of the University, said Andy Keenan, the school's representative to the Michigan Student Assembly. "WE'RE GOING to make it visible. We're going to clear up one of those (the committees' complaints right now," he said. Keenan said he thought the rally was very emotional. "It was a good way for everyone to ex- press the feelings that they've had all year," he said. Some students complained that the money saved from cuts to the art school was insignificant. "(The proposed cuts) are such a small fraction of the University, yet they're killing us," said art school student Amy McCarter. "I'm a junior and it's even scared me. Can you imagine if they cut 40 percent of the LSA faculty?" NON-ART SCHOOL students also marched in the rally. "Everyone concerned with redirection (of the University) should be here," said music school sophomore Matt Shevrin. Despite the committee's recommendation, the art school students are not giving up. "Everybody's pulling together to show what a good school we are and that we are an asset to the University," said art school sophomore Hollie Luter. "We're going to carry this as far as we can. We're not going to quit just because cuts are made." Echoed Keenan: "This is not the last thing we'll do. If this isn't effective we're going to keep doing it (protesting)." The students plan to hold classes in the Diag today. and will march Monday night from North Campus to the Michigan Union where a public hearing for the school will be held. House passes $165 billion Social Security package Bu rford ... resigns under pressure said she had "faithfully and honestly carried out your mission of helping this nation cleanse its air and water and makes wiser use of its lands.. ." "Your resignation today is an oc- casion of sorrow for us all," Reagan said. "But it is more than that: It is an act of unselfishness and personaj courage that once again demonstrates your loyalty to the nation." BURFORD HAD been under con- siderable pressure to quit, but Reagan had continued to defend her. He said in Klamath Falls, Ore., last Saturday that she could "stay as long as she wants to. The 40-year-old Burford, whose cont- servative policies had angered many environmentalists, had also said repeatedly that she would not quit despite calls for her resignation from such prominent Republicans as House Minority Leader Bob Michel of Illinois. Larry Speakes, the chief deputy White House press secretary, said Bur- ford met with Reagan at 5:25 p.m. EST to hand in her resignation. See EPA, Page 5 Panel on humanities holds final hearing By NEIL CHASE The committee reviewing the College of Engineering's humanities depar- tment held its final public hearing last night, but student turnout was nowhere near the room-filling crowds charac- teristic of other recent review hearings. Only 17 people came to discuss the future of the department, which faces possible elimination, because "a lot of students don't really seem to care where they get their English education from as long as they get one," said engineering senior Bryan Aupperle. AUPPERLE WAS one of four studen- ts who signed up to speak at the meeting to offer ideas on possible changes in the department. He told the committee that there "seems to be a weakness" in the Great Books courses, which every freshper- son must take for two semesters, and See HUMANITIES, Page 5 , WASHINGTON (AP) - The House, ending two years of party warfare, passed 282-148 yesterday night a bipar- tisan, $165.3 billion plan to pull Social Security from the brink of bankruptcy and raise the retirement age to 67 in the next century. The bill, which would make all American workers and retirees alike share the burden of bailing out system, now goes to the Senate, which likely will vote next week. The measure would make affluent retirees pay income tax on half their benefits; delay this July's cost-of-living increase for six months; accelerate payroll tax increases; boost the levy on the self-employed; and force new federal workers to join Social Security in 1984. THE HOUSE wrapped up work on the rescue plan after approving, 228-202, an amendment championed by Rep. J. Pickle, (D-Texas), to make today's 40- year-olds wait until age 66 to draw full Social Security benefits. And today's 23- year-olds - and those younger - would have to wait until 67. 'Nobody wants to cut benefits but, I think the American people expect us, the Congress, to make structural changes.' - Rep. J. Pickle (D-Texas) That tally was reaffirmed later on a nearly identical 230-200 procedural vote forced by opponents of the change. The lawmakers also soundly rejected, 296-132, a rival amendment sought by a tearful Rep. Claude Pepper, (D-Fla.), to leave the retirement age of 65 intact and rely instead on a 0.53 point payroll tax hike in 2010 to solve the final third of the system's long-term, $1.9 trillion deficit. THE 82-YEAR-OLD Pepper appealed to his colleagues not to mar the "magnificent package" by raising the retirement age, which he called just "another way of cutting benefits." "If we reduce benefits from the struc- ture that now exists. . . we will leave a taint upon its character that has never been put there by any previous Congress," declared Pepper. But Pickle rejoined, "We know that we cannot just keep on raising taxes ... Nobody wants to cut benefits but I think the American people expect us, the Congress, to make structural changes. We have raised taxes three or four times in this bill." Rep. Barber Conable Jr., (R-N.Y.), urged passage of Pickle's amendment, saying, "The issue is whether Social See SOCIAL, Page 3 Engineering humanities review committee members, James Carlson and Professor Ilene Forsyth, listen to students testify at last night's meeting. TODAY All systems go HE LIFTOFF OF Campus Meet the Press was aborted last week when the featured guest came Name games IF SISTER BOOM Boom ever wants to run for San Francisco's board of supervisors again, he will have to enter a convent and change his name to do it. The board, fed up with weird candidate names on the city ballot, gave intitial aproval earlier this week to a measure which would require candidates to use their legal names when running for office. The proposal must be anproved a second time to go into effect. Sister Boom Boom is a way to register a complaint against the choice presented by other candidates. Passage of the bill could endanger two planned mayoral campaigns-by candidates calling themselves James Bond Zero and Ronnie B. Foxy. Q The Daily almanac N THIS DATE in 1941, a poll of 50 engineering " 1966 - Students flocked to the Fourth Annual Ann Arbor Creative Arts Festival to see experimental films, including "The Flicker", which consisted of twenty minutes of flickering blank film. a 1970 - 300 people took part in an "environmental scream-out" sponsored by the public health school. The scream-out was part of a five day teach-in about the environment. i I I