Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom Lit 43U 1flai1& Aesthetic It's October, isn't it? Mostly sun- ny with a high in the upper 70s. Vol. XCIV - No. 21 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, October 1, 1983 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages Union builds, but so does its deficit By SHARON SILBAR The Michigan Union has run up a $645,000 deficit over the past five years and projects another $450,000 loss this year if the University administration doesn't bail it out. Union officials site losses from the Univer- sity Club-which totaled nearly $90,000 in some years-the loss of the University Cellar Student Bookstore in 1982, and inadequate payments from the University's general fund as reasons for the deficits. But some Union observers attribute the financial troubles to a lack of concern by Union officials who know that they can always tap student fees for additional funds. JAMES BRINKERHOFF, the University's vice president and chief financial officer an- nounced at a regents meeting last month that the $645,000 loss, which has accumulated since 1978, will be covered by existing funds. About half the money came from a profit the University made as a result of renegotiating its original $4.6 million loan for Union Ailing tenants union ,opening delayed By KAREN TENSA If you call the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, you're likely to get a recor- ding-and an incorrect one, at that. Once the driving force behind city- wide rent strikes, AATU is so finan- cially strapped that it cannot afford to regularly staff its office on the fourth floor of the Michigan Union. AND WHILE the message on its an- swering machine claims a counseling program will be organized by today, the organization's president said yesterday the-office's opening has been delayed indefinitely. "It's up in the air," said Special Education senior Mary Consani, who accepted the presidency of the ailing group in August. The tenants union's dwindling mem- bership will hold a meeting Tuesday to decide the organization's future, which includes a split into distinct groups. THE FIRST organization will still be called the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, and will continue to lobby for housing legislation in Lansing and conduct workshops on landlord-tenant issues, according to Maureen Delp, program director of the current AATU. The group will also continue to receive funds from the Michigan Student Assembly, which will give AATU 11 cents per student, or ap- proximately $7,000 this year. AATU currently receives about $500 additionally per year through doughnut sales in the fishbowl and donations from its members. BUT DELP said this sum has not been enough to support AATU's coun- seling service, which can advise and Ag mediate in landlord-tenant disputes. by th Office and printing expenses ate up tions- funds quickly, leaving little money to socia pay staff to supervise and train new and s volunteers. "S( To remedy this, AATU grew another is get branch-the Tenant-Landlord Resour- tor of ce Center. The new organization will be "W "strictly educational," according to socia Delp, and will distribute information Spe and conduct counseling. Socia AATU workers would like to fund the the st new organization through grants from Maki the federally-funded Ann Arbor Com- "fem munity Development Office. But it will care take six to 18 months to obtain the non- Be profit organization's tax exempt status much needed to obtain the grants. that i BOTH organizations will operate out food See TENANTS, Page 6 renovations. The remaining $303,000 came as a loan from the University which the Union will begin repaying next year out of its operating revenues. Union officials attribute the greatest part of the losses to a "grossly underfunded" operating budget from the University ad- ministration. They say the administration is not paying the Union enough for salaries, utilities, main- tenance, and office space for University and student organizations. THE MICHIGAN Union Board of Represen- tatives is preparing a report for the ad- ministration detailing the Union's budget needs. Robert Moore, the Union's budget director, said he's already received an assurance from an executive officer that University allocations would be increased. Moore said the administrator-whom he would not identify-acknowledged that the University "hasn't paid its fair share" in Union costs. "We will not have the $450,000 deficit after negotiations," Moore said. But just where that money will come from is uncertain. Union Director Frank Cianciola said that although he is proud of the fact that the Union has taken care of all its obligations without new money from students, he did not rule out a possible increase in student fees in the future. In 1979, the regents approved a fee hike to pay for both the current Union renovation program and regular Union operating costs. Students are now paying $11.53 per term for the Union, up from only $1.65 in the 1970s. CIANCIOLA also sites the loss of the Univer- sity Cellar, which had been paying $85,000 in rent per year, as a major reason for the Union's deficit. The student-run bookstore left its basement location in the Union in 1982 after it failed to agree to a new contract with Cian- ciola. Cianciola had asked for a substantial in- crease in rent, but Cellar management said it couldn't afford the increase if the Union con- tinued to restrict sales of Michigan insignia items. The University Club which is crowded with faculty members and administrators Monday through Friday at lunchtime has also been a big money loser for the Union. Before the new food operations opened up downstairs in the Union this month, the U-Club had been the mainstay of the building's Food Services operation, which accounted for annual deficits as high as $90,000, according to Moore. Moore would not break down how much of the losses could be attributed directly to the U- Club. MICHAEL CRABB, who was hired last year as the Union's food service coordinator, said he has "no idea" just how much the U-Club has lost in the past. And he predicted that it will be at least a year before the operation, which now includes six food stores downstairs, will break even. Union officials argue that food services don't See DEFICITS, Page 6 Cianciola ... $1 million in the hole? Witness says 'M' football players used cocaine By BARBARA MISLE A Florida man convicted of distributing narcotics testified in federal court Thursday that he first used cocaine with three Michigan football players at a party after the Gator Bowl in 1980. In March 1980, five Michigan football players were suspended from the team for alleged involvement with narcotics, and two players were put on probation. It's unclear whether the testimony refers to the same in- cident. MARK BRAMAN, a former defensive back, was the only player identified by Frank Durastanti during a trial in Bay City on an alleged marijuana and cocaine distribution ring in Michigan, said Al Entin, an attorney in the suit. DURASTANTI SAID he used cocaine with the Michigan players at a party in December 1980, but Michigan played in the Gator Bowl in December 1979. Durastanti said he delivered cocaine six times to the Florida apartment of Braman's brother, Frederick, a convicted cocaine dealer, said Entin. Braman, one of the 12 parties charged in the suit filed in January by U.S. attorneys, pled guilty to charges of distributing cocaine in July and received three years probation, ac- cording to a spokesperson in U.S. Dis trict Court. See COCAINE, Page 3 Carried away A Kappa Kappa Gamma pledge is hoisted into her new sorority yesterday by Sigma Chi members. See story, Page 5. Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS strong social services. ire crucial, says Mansour By CHERYL BAACKE ;es Mary Mansour, the former nun who was criticized e Catholic Church for her stand on state-funded abor- -said last night that more attention must be given to 1 services in order to preserve feelings of human dignity elf-worth. ocial (problems have) long-lasting repercussions and it ting into the genes of our society, said Mansour, direc- Michigan's social service department. VE AS A society can ill afford the lack of attention given i services," she said. eaking to about 160 University alumni from the School of al Work at a dinner at the Ann Arbor Inn, Mansour said ate social service department has three major focuses: Ong the family unit central; addressing the inization of poverty"; and trying to decrease health costs. cause the cost of health care is so high, Mansour said, so h of the department's money is used for medical care it ends up competing with providing basic needs such as and clothing to the poor. "It's the tail wagging the dog and we must get hold of health care (cost) containment," she said. IDEALLY THE social services department should shift the budget to provide more social services and spend less on health care, she said. Mansour said that almost 15 percent of all Michigan residents are receiving some type of assistance, and many of them are women and children. "Today's poor are concentrated in single parent families," Mansour said, adding that women head 90 percent of those families. Rising divorce rates speed up the route to poverty for women and affects females in all social classes, Mansour said. MANSOUR SAID she is concerned with the erosion of the family as the core of society as well as family violence and neglect. "These are grim realities at the core of our lives," she said. Strengthening the family is especially important in times of high unemployment and poverty, Mansour added, because feelings of human dignity and self-worth are threatened. Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWiS Agnes Mary Monsour, director of Michigan Department of Social Services, says social services are important for preserving human dignity, especially in times of high unemployment, yesterday at the Ann Arbor Inn. TODAY Altar-ing rules OME SEVENTH-GRADE girls are serving up a load of f.. th o nh,..h actnrm.hnmannts them to take na bells during the ceremony but most other functions are reserved for boys. Fourteen of the girls have written Arch- bishop John May to protest the changes. The former pastor at St. Michael's, Rev. Albert Kovarik, said he knew he was breaking the rules in allowing girls to serve at the altar, but said he followed his conscience in making the decision. out how to bless a chicken." So far, 40 parishioners have said they plan to participate. Flocken decided to move the ceremony outdoors when one person said he planned to bring a goat and another wanted to have his pony blessed. "I thought it was the craziest thing, but people responded," said Flocken, who got the idea from his father-in-law, also a church pastor. "It's one way of impressing on people the stewardship of all God's creations." Although Flocken says he gets along with pets better than he used to, he still har- bors a slight fear of dogs. "If any of the does don't look like Also on this date in history: " 1968 - The Daily reported that the last of three Ann Ar- bor High School students who had been suspended for their long hair would be readmitted. .1970 - The Apollo 15 astronauts spoke to an audience at Rackham Auditorium about their space mission and showed slides of the lunar surface. * 1975 - FBI agents arrested a 21-year-old man and issued warrants for two others in connection with the kid- nanping of a General Motors executive and his family from I i ! I