Ninety-Three Years of Editorial Freedom C I bt Sir 43UU IEIUIIQ Prospero Windy today with a 90 percent chance of rain. The high will reach near 50. %i. XCIII, No. 144 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, April 2, 1983 Ten Cents Ten Pages Hash Bash now just a omoker's habit, a It By JAYNE HENDEL The helmeted policemen and barricaded University buildings seemed a little out of place in the Diag yesterday, as the annual Hash Bash drew only about 25 pot smokers to elebrate the joys of Ann Arbor's Mnient marijuana law. While the first Hash Bash in 1972 was considered to be a stab at traditional moral values, this year's smokers said they attended more out of habit than anything else. IN THE 60s, everyone was rebellious saying, 'No more conformity.' You stood around and smoked hash and the police couldn't do anything. It was a statement," said Richard Peden, an ngineering freshman. "Now, it's just a "Tradition," he said. "The Hash Bash has no significance. It's going down - it doesn't make a dif- ference," said LSA senior Eric Ket- See HASH, Page 3 Numb er of jobless down in March By AP and UPI WASHINGTON-Unemployment re- ceded a notch in March to 10.3 percent of the civilian labor force, the gover- nment said yesterday. That left 11.4 million people on the jobless rolls - not counting 1.8 million others who long since gave up the quest for work and remain unconvinced they should try again. Michigan's unemployment rate jum- ped nearly a full point to 15.7 percent last month, providing more evidence the national economic recovery is not making itself strongly felt here. Janet Norwood, commissioner of labor statistics, said the March reports showed "moderate improvement" in the job market. But she acknowledged that the bare 0.1 percentage point drop in the seasonally adjusted unem- ployment - from 10.4 percent in February - was no cause for elation. "The unemployment rate has to drop two-tenths of a percent to be statistically significant," she told a news conference. THE REPUBLICAN Party hailed the report, representing the second decline in three months, as proof that President Reagan's promised economic recovery "is happening...,. the president is get- ting the job done." Democrats and the AFL-CIO insisted too many people remain out of work, and that the administration isn't doing enough to help them. See MICHIGAN, Page 6 Death in the Diag Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL Jean Raczkowski, of a Detroit theater group, performs an abstract improvosation yesterday on the Diag based on five stages of dying - denial, anger, fear, depression, and acceptance - theorized by death and dying expert Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. Students to vote on five MSA ballot proposals A By LAURIE DELATER In addition to picking Michigan Student assembly representatives next week, students will. be faced with five ballot questions, in- cluding three which could raise mandatory student government fees. If students vote to accept the proposals, they must be approved by the Regents before they can take effect. PERHAPS THE most original proposal on this ear's ballot is one asking students to support a ofessionally-staffed research center to provide free training and consultation for student groups. The proposal calling for the establishment of a Student Center for Educational Research and Innovation, funded by a $1.50 hike per term in MSA's mandatory fee, is the first placed on the ballot by petition in at least four years, accor- ding to its originator Richard Layman, an LSA senior. Layman calls the center a "must" to im- rove the effectiveness of student groups. *ompetent organizational functioning requires certain skills and knowledge" such as leadership and decision-making abilities, he said. THE PROFESSIONAL organizational develop- ment consultants and interns at the center could help those groups understand their deficiencies Four seek t Students voting in this year's Michigan Student Assembly elections April 5 and 6 have a big task ahead of them. In addition to picking a president and vice president from the four party slates, they must select representatives for the 37-member assembly from a field of candidates that is twice as large as it has been in previous years. Presidential and vice- presidential can- didates are: Marc Dann and Kim Fridkin, representing ACT; Duane Kuizema and o MSAjob Laurie Clement of the British Humour Party; Steve Schaumberger and Lynn Desenberg of Improve Michigan's Policies, Academics, and Communications Today (IMPACT); and Mary Rowland and Jono Soglin of It's Our University (IOU). There are also 16 independent candidates running for seats in eight of the University's 17 schools and colleges. For profiles on all the parties, turn to page 7. University administration. SOAP HAS been operating with only half of its staff this term after its director and two staff members left for new jobs, according to Michigan Union Director Frank Cianciola, who is responsible for SOAP. Cianciola said he felt SOAP currently does handle some of the projects targeted by the new center and could probably take on a more with a full staff to be hired for the fall. He suggested that he and Layman "get together to make sure that any duplication doesn't occur." Lyman's proposal is modeled after similar centers at the University 6f Massachussetts and Stanford University and utilizes many of the research methods initiated by the Univer- sity's Institute for Social Research. ANOTHER PROPOSAL calls for renewing. MSA's mandatory fee assessment - with a new twist. If approved, the current fee of $4.25 would be a base for increases or decreases in the fee in accordance with the cost-of-living in- dex. When MSA went to the students three years ago with the fee proposal, and initial increase was approved of 45 cents, or approximately 20 percent. Increases of 12 percent, or 40 cents, and 9 percent, or 35 cents, followed in 1981 and 1982. Increases in the past were projected to reflect expected expenses for the following years and not to keep up with the cost of living, according to a spokesman for the office' of student services. IN ADDITION to MSA's office expenses and allocations to student groups, the mandatory fee supports three free programs available for students. Student Legal Services, which provides legal counseling and representation for approximately 3000 students each year while working extensively on housing law reform, receives $2.90 of every $4.25 assessment. The course evaluation program, which publishes student evaluations of teachers and courses in its "Advice" booklet, collects 15 cen-- ts of the assessment while the Ann Arbor Tenants Union receives 10 cents. The remaining $1.10is used by MSA. Approval of this proposal would tie the fee assessment to inflation rates, while a vote no would abolish the mandatory fee. THE THIRD question facing students'calls for a 25 cent increase in the automatic fee assessment for college and school student See STUDENTS, Page 7 -..j and work toward correcting them through con- sultation and special training programs. At the same time, the center would be con- ducting campus-wide surveys to collect infor- mation about the quality of student life. The center could also be helpful to students who work with the administration. Layman, who has worked on the LSA Curriculum Com- mittee, said that he and other student represen- tatives often go before the administration asking for changes or improvements, only to be confronted with requests for evidence that current programs are indeed failing. "THE CENTER could collect hard data to help' students promote changes in the University," said Layman, who also heads MSA's course evaluation program. While some object to the hefty fee increase to support the program, others worry that it may duplicate services provided by the Student Organizations and Programs (SOAP) office. The office sponsors recreational events in ad- dition to advising and surveying student groups on campus. But Layman says that he thinks SOAP does not carry out its objectives, and that the proposed center has advantages over SOAP because it would be autonomous from the Petition against Daily collects 2,000 names By BARBARA MISLE A committee formed this week has collected close to 2,000 signatures, in only a day-and-a-half, from students on campus to protest "irresponsible jour- nalism" in The Michigan Daily, a ' kesman for the group said yester- The petition charges that since the present editors at the Daily have taken over, articles published have been sen- sational; increased racial, religious, and gender tensions on campus; misquoted sources; and misrepresen- ted the news. BRIAN SHER, head of the Commit- for a Responsible Michigan Daily, id the goal of the petition drive is to make the Daily publicly admit to acts of irresponsible journalism. . Sher, an LSA junior, said the petitions will be collected next Friday, and soon after the committee will present them to the Daily's editorial board for a response. "If a group this size comes to the Daily, they will have to respond," Sher said. "A responsible newspaper has to respond. We hope the petition will open up discussion with groups and the Daily." BARRY WITT, editor-in-chief of the Daily, said he doesn't think the paper has been irresponsible or that lines of communication with readers are closed. "We take phone calls every day from readers and we welcome letters and publish them," Witt said. Witt added that after the Daily received calls and letters objecting to a recent article entitled "Japs: Are they fact or fiction?" he and six other staff members attended an open meeting at Hillel, a Jewish organization on campus, to discuss the story. See COMMITTEE, Page 6 C" Concluding arguments given in Liuzzo case By GEORGEA KOVANIS The attorney for the children of a civil rights worker killed 18 years ago said yesterday that while the FBI could control former informant Gary Thomas Rowe's activities, it "could not suppress his genius for mayhem." In his closing arguments before U.S. District Court in Ann Arbor, Chief Council Dean Robb reaffirmed his clients' contention that Rowe was responsible for the death of Viola Liuzzo, a 39-year-old Detroit housewife and mother of five children. LIUZZO DROVE to Alabama in March 1965 to par- ticipate in'the voters rights march that stretched from Selma to Montgomery, Ala. Liuzzo was driving black march worker Leroy Moten back to Selma on March 25, 1965 when she was killed by See ATTORNEY'S, Page 2 A chain for change AP Photo Tens of thousands of British protesters formed a 14-mile train yesterday during an anti-nuclear demonstration in Aldermaston, England. The demonstration was staged in opposition to the proposal that Cruise missiles be built on the site. See story, Page 6. TODAY Politeness pays R UDENESS DOESN'T pay in Houston, Texas. Don't believe it? Well just ask 18-year-old Michael Washington. Washington refused to an- swer a judge's questions with a "yes, sir" and was given 3 0 dv in iail tn nlish nff his manners. Sale" signs in front of the building. The signs had "Budget Priorities Committee" written on the back, a reference to a budget committee that has been at the center of the Univer- sity's budget cuts. The telephone number listed on the front of the sign was that of Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs and provost. Jim Beblavi, a 'physics research engineer whose office is in the building, said no one there knew who planted the signs. E e 1968 - About 400 University students marched from the Diag to the Ann Arbor Selective Service Board to read a statement repudiating the draft to local board officials. " 1953 - Former University faculty member Jonas Salk announced the discovery of a new vaccine which promised immunity against influenza for as long as one or two years with a single injection. D . . , 1L -7 - i