Ninety- Three Years of Editorial Freedom E Alit43UU 1E3ai1u Taciturn Cloudy with a chance of light rain today. The high will be in the mid 44s. Vol. XCIII, No. 132 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, March 19, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages Prof.0 war corporate 7ns of By DAN GRANTHAM Although the University may be star- ving for additional funds, it should not rely on corporations to help the Univer- sity through its financial crisis; a School of Natural Resources professor said last night at a forum on the redirection of the University. "Corporations will be able to pour millions into universities," said Prof. Bunyan Bryant, who warned that this will allow them to direct the goals of the institutions. "We must ask at what stage of starvation will we prefer military contracts to academics." BRYANT ADMITTED that the cost of education is expensive but that it is a necessary cost. "Education is expen- sive, but ignorance is more expensive." d 1 ha l dh lit of education, said Bryant. "Education provides people with resources to meet the future and cope in the present," he said. University administrators are doing all they can to help the University, "but (they) have a different assessment of what is going to make a better University." STILL THE university has to become more than a carbon copy of the federal government he said, pointing to federal cuts in the arts and ecological programs. Bryant compared these to similar University proposed cuts of the art school and natural resources school. Bryant called for the university as a whole to "tighten our belts" and absorb budget reductions. He suggested that the faculty become more involved in tid the cutting procedures, but said they "need more information so we can make more informed decisions." Bryant said the university cannot af- ford to adopt an attitude "where what's mine is mine, and what's yours is negotiable." "This lifeboard ethic stifles creativity," he said, at a time when the university "needs all the creativity it can muster." BRYANT SAID the university must act now to prevent a crisis in education. "We cannot afford to wait, we must chart our own course," he said. State Rep. Lynn Jondahl of East Lansing joined Bryant on the podium, also addressing the University's finan- cial difficulties. But he looked at the See 'U,' Page 3 Lynn Jondahl, a representative from East Lansing, told a crowd of 100 at Rackham Auditorium last night the shape of the state's economy is threatening University funding. Jondahl was one of three speakers at the first session of a two- dav co ference.'U in Crisis." uy u , v ' lm. Bsuaget cuts nave iowerea Lne quai No body wins CRISPbattle I1y 1' By BILL SPINDLE Yesterday marked the end of the battle between the Public Interest * Research Group in Michigan and a student committee that tried to keep PIRGIM from collecting funds in registration lines. Both sides lost. The University Regents refused PIRGIM'S request for a collection system in which a fee would be automatically assessed unless a student specifically refused to pay it. BUT THEY supported PIRGIM's present fee collection system, against the wishes of the Student Committee 0 for Reform and Progress (SCRAP). The Regents and administrators; however, made it clear to PIRGIM members that they came close to losing University cooperation altogether. The Regents also approved an ap- proximate 6 percent housing rate in- crease for students living in residence halls next year. The hike will boost the cost of a double room in a traditional, hall to $2,648 next year. Members of both PIRGIM and PIRGIM, students stuck with collection system SCRAP have spent an exhaustive amount of time and energy over the last two months defending their respective positions and gathering more than 12,000 petition signatures between the groups. Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline), who supported SCRAP's position, argued that PIRGIM did not meet the requirements of a Regents resolution which says the group must have financial support from at least 30 per- cent of the student populatin to retain the present collection system. "PIRGIM'S support is clearly in the 20 percent range," said Roach, who pointed out that more than 7,000 students signed SCRAP's petition to keep PIRGIM off the registratin lines. "It certainly is not clear to me that PIRGIM enjoys the support of studen- ts today," Roach said. "If they can't (get student support), then I don't think they should enjoy the funding system under our guidelines." Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Ar- bor) also argued that PIRGIM lacked adequate student support. "You have 7,000 signatures lying on someone's desk. That many young people signed up in one week to say 'Get rid of PIRGIM! "How can you ignore it?" Baker said. "I'M CONTINUALLY confounded as to why the board does not do away with the whole (collection) system once and for all," he said. Even those Regents who voted to keep the present system warned PIRGIM members that they should boost student support before their contract with the University comes up again in two years. Regent Nellie Varner (D-Detroit) called PIRGIM a "failing organization." After the meeting, Varner said she did not think the group had strong student support, but that she was willing to give PIRGIM one last chance. PIRGIM members received a similar warning from Regent Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) during the meeting when she said, "I hope the people of PIRGIM are understanding the trend of thinking on this board." University President Harold Shapiro conceded that the reason ad- ministrators recommended preser- ving the present system was because PIRGIM ihas traditionally received strong support from several Regents. "I am very nervous any time the University advocates any organization on campus," he said. The Regents also approved a 5.95 per- cent rate increase for traditional See SUPPORT, Page 3 A little privacy, please? h Panda bears Hsing-Hsing and Ling-Ling (on bottom) finally mated after eight years yesterday. The bears, a present to former President Nixon from the Peoples Republic of China, will continue to reside at the National Zoo in Washington. Testimony charges EPA colluded with Dow From AP and UPI An Environmental Protection Agen- cy official, in explosive congressional testimony, said yesterday acting EPA chief John Hernandez pressured him to change a report blaming dioxin pollution on Dow Chemical Co. Valdas Adamkus, administrator of EPA's Midwest regional office in Chicago, said, Hernandez telephoned him three times in June 1981 seeking to soften the report, and in one conver- sation "angrily" denounced our work as trash." HIS TESTIMONY before a House energy and commerce subcommittee directly contradicts Hernandez' statements earlier this week that he merely asked EPA scientists to review their work and that he did not know what deletions were made from the sensitive study. See EPA, Page 2 Cabbies shift 1i1to1ne1gerwit ByG O G AK VANIS "l TT iT _ L ___L T..i..L..1 _ __ . . One yr. of driving under my belt No poorer in my life, have I ever felt. 350 No-Go's, 200 (I'm sorry, I don't have enough money) And the sight of a knife, wasn't very funny Gained 20 lbs in the last year Too much sitting, boredom, no-go's and beer. Please Mr. Reagan, lower the interest rate Or Ypsi State may be my fate. Cabbies play a waiting game day in and day out, sitting in their taxis, hoping for fares across town or across campus. But some drivers turn this time into a period of creative thinking. And that's how Yellow Cab Company's magazine, Cab Art was created. "It started out as just being stories, anecdotes, etc., about cab driving," says Marilyn Moran, one of the founders of her company's literary magazine. Later the publication expanded to in- clude photographs and car-' toons as well asa steady diet of poems and short stories, written primarily by Yellow Cab hacks (that's taxi talk for cab drivers) and their friends. THE MAGAZINE, which began publishing about three years ago, has put out 10 issues and is looking forward to having another issue prin- ted sometime this summer. Writing in the magazine ranges from the dramatic to absurdist. One story last spring dealt with "The Effect w of Nuclear War on the Taxicab Industry." Cabbie Ken Freedman wrote: "Any driver knows that irridescent meters (which most cabs are equipped with) are next to impossible to read on a bright, sunny day. Can you imagine trying to read one during a nuclear blast? No self- respecting person would venture into a cab without being able to read what the fare is." FUNDS FOR the magazine come from the, pockets of Moran, and her co-editor, Ted Sylvester, who now owns his own cab. Moran does not hesitate to admit that profits from the magazine are non-existent. Since its first issue, Moran says people outside the taxi business have grown to know and love the publication. "Kind of a peculiar phenomonen has started out," Moran says. "We sort of gained a cult following." Now, of the ap- proximately 200 copies printed each issue, about one-fifth are T mailed to fans across the country, Moran says. "I think there's sort of a cosmic fascination with cab driving that's not ex- plainable," Moran says. SHE SAYS the idea for the magazine was conceived several years ago when Bart Plantanga, a local cab driver and creative writer, suggested the cab company publish a magazine. This idea, accor- ding to Moran, has evoked some unusual feelings from the public. "People think it's a pretty peculiar phenomenon," Moran said, adding that the public has a fixed stereotype of what a taxi- driver is and what he or she does. People believe "cab drivers are just sort of not real smart, uneducated people," she explained. "We've got people driving who've got engineering degrees," Moran added. ANOTHER MISCONCEPTION people have of cabbies is one of dishonesty. "You're more likely to hear a story about a cab driver taking someone the long way (on a fare) than being a good Samaritian. [h poetry Moran believes the idea of cab drivers possessing literary talents-is not an extremely new or unusual one. She says taxi driving used to be a means of support for aspiring writers and ar- tists while attempting to make a break and get a foot in the door of the writing world. Moran says this is not true anymore. Today's cab drivers, she says, are not struggling artists trying to make it big; they are men and women trying to earn a living for themselves and their families. For them, writing is just something to do See HACKS. Page 2 ova= TODAY- Welcome to GEAC IGH TECH HAS invaded the already advanced University Library system. Beginning spring term. 1983. students and faculty will begin using register at the Undergraduate Library Circulation desk af- ter they have CRISPed to receive the bar code on their IDs. By the way, since the new system is tied to CRISP, those library fines will now become hold credits a little faster. Sorry folks. Q Will the Boss sing it? printing company, said he wrote the song for fun and has no plans to market it. A sample of the lyrics: "Betting halls and shopping malls/Good ol' Rutgers U/And 47 shoe stores/Line Route 22./"Lots of dineries, oil refineries/Our highways make you cough./But Spring Lake Heights and Belmar/Are places to get off." " 1947 - Senate rules committee overrode the standing committee and voted to allow Louis Lantier, a black correspondent, into the Senate press gallery. * 1921 - Daily reporters armed with letters from the Dean of Women were allowed to watch and then review the seventh annual Junior girls play entitled Seline Sue. This was the first time males were allowed to watch the all- female production. r I i