'M' cagers shut down CMU, 58-39 INinety-four Years fReu Of I I7U I ~ I I j i ~n_ Uflurui n emd3 Edtor-al Fre mostly cloudy with a chance of Vol. XCIV-No. 70 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, December 1, 1983 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages g Reagan kills rights link to Salvador aid WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan, ignoring ap- peals from the State Department, yesterday killed legislation that would have tied continued military aid for El Salvador to its progress on human rights and land reform. Reagan doomed the bill through a "pocket veto" - allowing it to languish past a midnight deadline for his signature. EVEN SO, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the admnistration was "firmly committed to the protection of human rights, economic and political reforms, the holding of elections and progress in prosecuting the cases of murdered American citizens in El Salvador." Speakes said that even without the law, the administration would provide periodic reports to Congress on the "political, economic and military situation in El Salvador." But he did not say that such reports would specifically incorporate the human rights issue. Earlier, officials who spoke on condition they not be iden- tified said Reagan's objections to the bill stemmed from his opposition to congressional constraints on his authority to conduct foreign policy and from concern that the legislation would undercut the U.S. commitment to help El Salvador in its fight against leftist guerrillas. THE BILL, sent to Reagan by the Senate on Nov. 17, Under that law, the administration certified four times over the past tw'o years that the Salvadoran government met the requirements for military aid. Congress has approved $64 million in military aid for El Salvador in fiscal 1984, which began Oct. 1. The officials said Secretary of State George Shultz favored Reagan signirng the bill to avert a confrontation with Congress and prevent a veto being misread in El Salvador as a reduced U.S. commitment on human rights. CONGRESS will not reconvene until Jan. 23, after the date for the next scheduled certification which would have been required in mid-January. Despite Reagan's veto, Congress can resubmit the legislation after it returns next year. The administration has long opposed the certification requirement, although Reagan signed it into law two years ago after it was attached to a foreign aid authorization bill in December 1981. Since then, administration officials have said the cer- tification procedure has some value in pressuring the Salvadoran government to reduce human rights violations, but they contend the same effect could be achieved through other means. In the four certifications, the administration has reported improvements in the Salvadoran government's human rights Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF T .., L ... .. . .V.. ice ~oarain~ revives a law that ties continued military aid to El Salvador L -----------.., C to a presidential finding every six months that the record although acknowledging continued abuses. Accor- Yesterday's snowy weather didn't stop Ann Arbor resident Mike Bosh from skateboarding. Sliding over iced leaves just Salvadoran government was making a "concerted" effort to ding to an agency of El Salvador's Catholic Church; more made for "more tricks," he said. respect human rights, achieving progress on political and than 40,000 Salvadoran civilians have been killed since 1979, land reforms, trying to bring to justice the killers of eight most at the hands of Salvadoran security forces or related Americans and seeking an end to the civil war, paramilitary groups. By GEORGEA KOVANIS dination instead of counseling, which is CULS's main CULS would be the most beneficial structure for the A decision to transfer the duties of the Hispanic of- function. office, the task of finding a new "home" for HASSC fice within the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills Marino argued that it would be easier for the office began. to a single American Culture professor has sparked a to get funding if it was not a component of the larger "We explored all kinds of avenues," said Copeland storm of protest from the University's Hispanic center. last Wednesday, HASSC coordinators said they were community. BUT SINCE she made her proposal, Marino says, told their office would be reorganized. According to Yolanda Marino, coordinator of the "This office has been in limbo in a kind of a way." Instead of having two part-time coordinators and Hispanic-American Student Services Component When the LSA Executive Committee first received three office workers, Steiner recommended that the (HASSC), one faculty member cannot properly do the the request for the separation, Assistant LSA Dean University hire a faculty member for the Americar work currently performed by the office's five part- Carolyn Copeland said the proposal was rejected Culture program to assume the duties the office time staff members. because it was understood that the office did coun- currently performs. BUT LSA officials say they are simply following seling work and that was something which CULS ALTHOUGH details on this post are still sketchy through on HASSC's request, approved by the handles. Marino said the faculty member would be respon- college's executive committee last April, that the of- But later, Copeland said, HASSC re-presented the sible for teaching courses about Hispanics as well as Ui tspatic s fice be separate from CULS. proposal stressing that it was primarily concerned developing curriculum and recruiting Hispanic Both sides agree the controversy stems from a with coordinating academic programs. Executive faculty members to campus. proposal Marino presented to the executive commit- committee members changed their minds and According to Copeland, the decision to put a faculty tee in February, recommending that the office be decided that it would be best for the office to be member in charge of the academic programming severed from the learning center because much of separated from CULS. HASSC's services involve academic program coor- ONCE BOTH sides agreed that autonomy from See CULS OFFICE, Page 5 a e r'1 v e d e n e Ty C J7 Engineering college set to expand computer network By THOMAS MILLER An agreement between the College of Engineering and two major computer manufacturers could put microcom- puters on every engineering student's desk within a few years, officials in the college say. Plans currently call for the college to pay Apple Computers, Inc. and Apollo Computer between $4 million and $7 million to provide approximately 1,000 computers over the next two years. THE NEW system, which has been operating since the beginning of the term, already had computer terminals located in East Engineering Building, the Chrysler Center, and the Dow Building. The million-dollar expansion, to be formally announced at a press conference tomorrow, marks the college's plan to make the computer network the most sophisticated univer- sity system in the nation. Future expansions may provide each engineering student with a microcom- puter, engineering Dean James Duder- stadt said. Students in the college currently pay $100 each term to help finance the new system. Duderstadt said he does not foresee an increase in that fee. AS THE system grows, officials said, students may eventually be offered the option to buy a computer. However, aerospace Prof. Richard Phillips, who is directing the project, said such plans are still a long way off. "It's still too early to tell what the long term plans will be," he said. "We're just starting, but we'll be rapidly heading towards a computer in every room in a year and a half to two years. It's something that we'll just have to wait and see with." According to Phillips, the current market value of the equipment the college plans to buy will be almost $8 million. Discounts will significantly reduce the purchase price, he said. "WHEN YOU COMMIT yourself to spend $2 million to $3.5 million with each company, they're going to be willing to give you a discount," he said. Phillips said current plans to buy 1,000 computers from the firms over the next two years may change as prices fall. "Exactly what we'll be able to buy a year from now is hard to say," he said. FUNDS FOR the new system will come from several sources, officials said. Part of the tab-about $1.1 million per year-will be covered by the $100 per term student fee. The balance will come from the University's general fund, private donations, and loans. Phillips said the college's Computer Policies Committee chose Apple and Apollo to supply the new system. He said a number of firms were in- vestigated prior to the decision, in- cluding IBM. IBM was rejected, he said, because company policies inhibited planning for future expansion. "In order to plan down the road, we had to be able to look at what the com- pany had planned for the future," Phillips said: "But IBM refused to let us do that." Local residents join in protest By CLAUDIA GREEN At 6:30 a.m. today, nine people from Ann Arbor will risk arrest when they blockade the entrance of a Walled Lake company that manufactures cruise missile engines. These members of an Ann Arbor af- finity gro'up, a support group for the protestors, will face charges of trespassing, violating a court injun- ction that makes it illegal to block traf- fic flowing in or out of the gate, and conspiring to commit a misdemeanor. THE ANN ARBOR group will be the fourth this week to blockade the Williams International Corporation and its members may join the 26 people that have already been arrested this week. Affinity group member Maria Ringo, an LSA junior, said that 20 protesters See CITY, Page 3 Decisions, decisions Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF LSA Dean Peter Steiner tells a Campus Meet the Press audience that student input in University decisions is important, but that a voting student position should not be created on the LSA Executive Committee. See story, page 3. TODAY Pull the plug SOME OF AL Copeland's neighbors think he takes the Christmas spirit a little too far, so they've asked local officials to pull the plug on the yearly light show on his house and front lawn in Metairie, La. More than 130 neigh- bors have signed a petition asking the parish council to do Fools gold THE CABBAGE Patch saga continues. Visions of Cab- bage Patch dolls raining from the skies sent two dozen people in Milwaukee scurrying to a stadium in near- freezing temperatures after two radio announcers jokingly said the scarce Christmas items would be dropped by a B-29 bomber. Bob Reitman and Gene Mueller said on their WKTI-FM show Tuesday morning that buyers should head for Milwaukee County stadium at 3 p.m., bringing catcher's heard it on the radio I thought "far out," he said. "I thought some rich guy wanted to give them away. It's not that far- fetched. It could be possible that somebody could do it for a publicity stunt." Near riots and injuries have been reported in several places as shoppers waited hours in line only to find the dolls sold out. " 1973 - In an apparent attempt to boost sagging enrollment, the English department announced changes in its concentration program for the fall term that would allow students to specialize in their field of interest.j " 1976 - South Quad, West Quad, and the Michigan Union were among several University buildings plunged into darkness at about 6:45 p.m. when a sudden power black-out hit a two-block area west of central campus for upwards of 75 minutes. " 1978 - Former University student Bob Higgins filed suit against the University regents for $885,000 because the I i 1 I