Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom E t~43UU tti No suntans It will 'be mostly cloudy today, with a chance the sun might peek through this afternoon. High near 20. Unsuitable for golf. Vol. XCIV-No. 86 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, January 14, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages ., I Blanchard faster tax 4 PLEASANT RIDGE, Mich. (UPI) - Gov. James Blanchard proposed yesterday that the state begin rolling back income taxes sooner than planned - perhaps even as soon as next fall. He warned, however, that any rollback would depend on adoption of his yet unannounced 1985 budget, which he called the tightest plan in years. CURRENTLY OFFICIALS are not planning to reduce the state's 6.1 per-. cent income tax until next Jan. 1. Speaking from near his Pleasant Ridge home, Blanchard proposed a three- month speed-up to the process, agreeing to drop taxes to 5.35 percent on Oct. 1 of this year if the legislature adopts the budget he is expected to an- nounce next week. Blanchard conceded the austerity in the budget would not be easily achieved, and predicted the rollback plan would have "minimal, if any," impact on advocates of recall for lawmakers supporting his 38 percent income tax increase last year. He could not "do anything to please" those who have brought about recall of two democratic lawmakers and jeopardized Democratic control of the Senate, he suggested. "THOSE PEOPLE have their own agenda. We will oppose it. We will fight it." Responding to economic realities of the 1980s, he said, he will offer "the tightest budget this state has seen in a great many years." "If the legislature will enact that budget by June 1, and if the Legislature enacts the budget without any in- creases in spending over my recom- mendation - without any budget busting - we can accelerate our suc- urges euts cessful plan by three months," he told reporters at Pleasant Ridge, Flint, and Grand Rapids. "ANY SPEEDING up of the scheduled tax cut must be tied directly to spending restraint," Blanchard said. "I must say - in no uncertain terms - that to discuss, accelerating our scheduled tax cuts without rigid budget discipline in Lansing would unquestionably undermine our state's fiscal security and it would be a step backward toward bankruptcy," he said. The plan received mixed reviews from lawmakers. Some say they will not give up efforts to do it even sooner. GENERALLY, Democrats respon- ded favorably to the governor's proposal, saying it is an indication the economy is improving in response to See BLANCHARD, Page 3 Triumph AP Photo Former KMBC-TV anchorwoman Christine Craft fields questions outside the federal building in Joplin, Mo. yesterday after winning her fraud suit against Metromedia, Inc. Craft's attorney, Dennis Egan, left, and Sarah Hays right ,helped her win $225,000 in actual damages and $100,000 in punitive damages. See Story, Page 3. Nuclear plant license rejected WASHINGTON (AP) - Government safety regulators, citing quality assurance failures including the "fraudulent" performance of one con- tractor, unconditionally denied yester- day a license for a virtually completed $3.35 billion atomic power plant in Illinois. The unanimous decision of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's atomic safety and licensing board barred the twin-reactor Byron Nuclear Power Station near Rockford from starting up, and marked first .time in the quarter-century history of the nuclear power industry that a license was flatly refused. THE THREE-JUDGE panel said Commonwealth Edison Co. of Chicago, the plant's owner and the nation's largest nuclear utility, "has a very long record of noncompliances with NRC requirements." Panel charges Illinois* contractor with fraud, The only previous time an NRC licen- sing board has rejected a permitfor a nearly completed nuclear plant was in- June 1982. But that was a conditional rejection in which the plant's owner was invited to make corrections and re- apply. Jim Toscas, a spokesman for Com- monwealth Edison, said the company had planned to begin loading uranium into the first of the plants before July and have the plant generating elec- tricity before 1985. "IT'S GOT to be contingent upon the resolution of some problem or the sup- plying of some information," Toscas said of the ruling. "We'll act as fast as we can to remedy that." But NRC officials said there is no way, even through reinspections, to ever provide the assurances required by law that the construction work on the Byron plant is satisfactory. The electrical contractor in the plant's construction, Hatfield Electic Co., "has a long and bad quality assurance record there," the NRC board said. "WE HAVE no confidence in the quality of Hatfield's work . .. and we have no confidence in the re-inspection program either," it said. Unsatisfactory quality control by several other contractors on the project also was cited by. the government regulators. "For example," it said, "Systems Control Corp., a supplier of safety- related electrical and control equip- ment ... had a fraudulent and ineffec- tive quality assurance program and the Department of Justice is investigating that matter. David Brule, an executive and Systems Control's headquarters in Iron Mountain, Mich., said "We don't know anything about it," when, asked about the NRC ruling. Libraries may begin fine crackdown soon By MARCY FLEISHER University library officials must still rely on students' sense of honesty to en- sure the return of library books, but now officitls are hoping that by the end of next week, the threat of a fine will put books back on the shelves. Libraries still are not collecting most overdue book fines, but officials said most of the problems caused by the new computer system, Geac, are now ironed out. ,ut.THE GEAC computer system for the circulation of materials has created problems in notifying patrons about overdue books since the begin- ning of the'school year. "A bug in the system programming" prevented libraries from sending notices for overdue books to students, said Jim Cruse, head of circulation ser- vice for the Graduate Library. The reserve desk at the Un- dergraduate Library, however, has been keeping track of overdue books and collecting fines, added Cruse. CRUSE SAID officials decided not to charge fines when books are eventually' returned because "it would be unfair to charge people if they are unaware that their book is overdue. "Although people are not being sent notices, the system does keep track of who has the book. Therefore, there is potential penalty for breaking rules," Cruse added. David McDonald, head of the library systems office, said yesterday that most of the problems with Geac have been ironed out, except for a "few ex- tremely minor things," and that over- due notices may be sent out as early as next week. THOSE "MINOR things" will not prevent library officials from for- mulating a policy to begin collecting fines again, said McDonald. Officials plan to inform the campus comnjunity through publicity when the fine system will be reinstated. "We will probably set up some sort of grace period where patrons with over- due books can return them free of fine," McDonald said. . A book is defined as overdue based on a number of rules that are programmed into the computer, such as whether or not the book is on reserve and if the patron is a student, teaching assistant, or professor, McDonald said. "BEFORE THE computer produces a notice, it looks at the criteria that the rules are based on, such as the status of the person who has checked out the book, and the kind of book it is," Mc- Donald said. "Based on the answers to these rules, the system determines if a notice should be sent out," he added. So far, 90 percent of the Geac system has been tested, McDonald said. The other 10 percent relates to reserve materials and will be tested within the next three days, he added. STUDENTS HAVE been notified of fines for overdue reserve books, See GEAC, Page 2 Meeting an iguana AP Photo, China Premier Zhao Ziyang, right, tours the University of California's Lawrence Hall of Science with Dr. Glen Seaborg, Nobel Laureate and chemistry professor, yesterday in Berkeley.-Zhao is petting an iguana held by Rachel Kram, 12, on his two-day visit to the Bay area. Doily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Scurrying from flurries Running from yesterday afternoon's snowfall,a man hovers beneath an um- brella to battle the gusty weather near the corner of State Street and South University Ave. F TODAY- Little floods EVERAL MARY Markley residents living on the 1st floor of Little house got the worst that Friday the 13th had to offer. Yesterday afternoon, a student's radiator How many letters in Schembechler? P EOPLE WHO really want to be part of the New Orleans scene this summer can pay $25 to have visitors step all over them-or at least their names. For that amount, a historical society will imprint a name on one of the bricks being laid on sidewalks at an entertainment area of the world's fair..The Preservation Resource Center says only 10,000 bricks will be available for personalizing. There can be only one name per brick, and it cannot exceed 24 let- held out for beer. Eumarian's solution: "Bilk." The Viroqua resident promoted his idea musically Thursday at a hearing before the Senate Urban Affairs and Government Operations Committee, which had also heard suggestions for making the American water spaniel the state dog and the tuba the state musical instrument. To the taped accom- paniment of his copyrighted country-and-western-style song, Eumarin literally sang the praises of "Bilk." The lyrics facetiously suggest that Wisconsin's dairy famers feed their cattle "some crazyweed" to give milk an in- toxicating property, and then maybe it could fetch as high a price as beer. E " 1974 - A lone bandit held up the Cashier's Office in the LSA Building at mid-day, walking off with $1,900. * 1967 - A system in which LSA first- and second-year students would be allowed to sign their own schedule cards before registering was among thedproposals for reform of the counseling system presented at a UAC-sponsored forum. " 1948'- The Daily reported that the J-Hop committee signed a coitract with one local photography firm to shoot the big dance even though another photographer submitted a lower bid. i cl i