E Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 17, 1984 MSU's Mackey criticizes media IN BRIEF :1 EAST LANSING, Mich. (UPI) - Michigan State University President Cecil Mackey said yesterday events surrounding the announcement that he is leaving MSU were "not helpful" to the school's image. In making the comment, however, Mackey made no direct accusations against any members of the MSU Board of Trustees. He also indicated that he is not ac- tively seeking the presidency of another university. MACKEY discussed his recently an- nounced decision to leave MSU during an interview on the public television program "Off the Record." The president's announcement Tuesday that he will leave MSU by June 1985 was preceded by media reports about dissension among the trustees. Mackey declined to speculate on whether those stories were planted by his critics. And he refused to comment directly on the board's handling of the affair generally. BUT, PRESSED on whether the mat- ter was handled appropriately by the board, Mackey said, "I have never chosen to use the public media indirec- tly to do things that seem to be more appropriately done person-to-person." The president said he did not know whether that was done in this instance, noting the media often uses unidentified sources. Asked whether "the process" damaged the image of the university, he said, "I don't think that kind of thing, the indication that that's the way a board does business, is helpful to an in- stitution, no." HE ADDED "it's not the way I would hope to see a board that governs one of the world's great universities fun- ction." Mackey reiterated that he reached the decision to leave MSU before the stories began appearing. He insisted the fact that some board members were known to be critical of him was not a significant factor in that decision. Democrats vie for Fifth- urd nomination Mackev ... media hurt school's image v THE BEST, JUST GOT BETTEI (Continued from Page 1) But Rachelson says her work as a legislative aid in the U.S. and State House of Representatives and her current position as the Executive Subscribe to The Michigan Daily Director of the Michigan Network of Runaway and Youth Services is a solid background for a council seat. "I probably have more government experience than Doris does," said Rachelson, a University graduate who is in her late twenties. Both candidates say they are concer- ned about the high rental rates for off- campus housing. Landlords charge students more in order to pay for their high property taxes, Rachelson says. "Students' rent are so high because property taxes are so high," says Rachelson. "(Landlords) take student housing for granted." Rachelson also said she thinks tighter security is needed on campus. 540 E. Liberty St. 761-4539 Corner of Maynard & Liberty i , Whenyoure in a tight spot, good friends 'will. help you out Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Soviets choose No. 2 position MOSCOW - Mikhail Gorbachev gave crucial endorsement to Konstantin Chernenko and is now the No. 2 man in the Kremlin, a highly placed Soviet source says. The 52-year-old agriculture specialist, the youngest man on the ruling Politburo, was reputed to be Yuri Andropov's choice as successor. With Chernenko selected to lead the country as general secretary of the Communist Party, Gorbachev's powerful new role was first suggested by his position next to Chernenko at ceremonies in honor of Andropov. Then it was announced on television Wednesday night that Gorbachev had made a previously undisclosed statement at the Central Committee plenum Monday that named Chernenko leader. The Gorbachev statement appears in a brochure of speeches obtained by The Associated Press yesterday in advance of publication. The brochure in- dicated Gorbachev, speaking "on behalf of the Politburo," closed the meeting with an endorsement of Chernenko. Tobacco firm calls for debate WASHINGTON - A new tobacco company advertising campaign calling for an "open debate" about smoking is a "smokescreen" to confuse the public about the hazards of cigarettes, three major health groups charged yesterday. The American Cancer Society, the American Heart Association and the American Lung Association joined to condemn the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.'s planned new series of advertisements concerning smoking and health. The company announced last month that it would place ads in national newspapers and magazines which would call for "an open debate" on the casual link between smoking and diseases. "We want to try and-substitute rational discussion for the emotionalism currently surrounding smoking," said Reynolds' Chairman Edward Horrigan Jr., who is spearheading the effort. Business analysts say the expected multimillion-dollar campaign marks: the first time that one of the country's six major tobacco companies has tried to defend smoking on its own instead of through a trade association. Parents stall son's death penalty WESLACO, Texas - The father of ahigh school dropout who police say killed six people during a crime spree triggered by marital trouble yester- day asked the public for help in overturning his son's death sentence. Elderly F.C. Moreno, who suffers from epilepsy, said both he and his wife are ill and the knowledge their son, Elised Moreno, was given the death sen- tence for the slaying of a state trooper was causing them "to die slowly and very painfully." Prosecutors said the shootings began after Moreno's wife, Blanca, left him and sought refuge with her brother in Bryan, Texas. Police said Moreno killed his brother-in-law, Juan Garza, Juan's wife, Esther, and later shot and killed Texas highway patrolman Russell Lynn Boyd, 25, who stopped Moreno during his 130-mile flight back to his native: lower Rio Grande Valley. During that flight he kidnapped two people, shot to death three elderly' people who refused to help him and stole two cars. Cigarette smoking harmful to pregnant women, study says BALTIMORE - A two-and-a-half year study of pregnant women has proved "very strong" new evidence that cigarette smoking is harmful to newborns, researchers said yesterday. The study, conducted on 935 pregnant women in the Baltimore area, showed women who stopped or reduced smoking while pregnant gave birth to infants significantly heavier and longer than newborns of mothers who continued smoking at their usual level, researchers said. "I think this is very strong evidence that the fetal growth is retarded by maternal smoking," said Mary Sexton, an associate professor at the Univer- sity of Maryland School of Medicine and co-author of the study, funded by the National Institutes of Health. Previous studies linked differences in birth weights and the number of cigarettes smoked by mothers. The University of Maryland study, however, was the first to show the correlation in a randomly selected sample group, Sexton said. Housing industry shows increase WASHINGTON - Optimistic builders set a five-year high for new housing construction last month, starting 15 percent more projects than they did in December despite hefty mortgage interest rates, the government said yesterday. Considering the housing industry's appetite for steel, textiles, appliances and labor, the improvement was the best proof yet of a resurging economy in a week filled with good economic news. The Commerce Department said the industry's bench mark, the pace of production in houses per year, reached 1.9 million in January, the best mon- th since December 1978. It was a surprisingly large jump from December's 1.67 million unit level. In a separate report yesterday the department said personal income clim- bed a healthy 1.1 percent in January. Americans, on average, added $104 to their annual after-tax income. Spending on both goods and services grew slightly more than income, 1.2 percent, forcing the savings rate down by 0.1 percentage point to 5.2 percent of disposable income. Friday, February 17, 1984 Vol. XCIV-No. 115 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University: of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the: University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by, mail outside Ann Arbor. 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