4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daiily - Saturday, September 8, 1984 Regent named in bankruptcy suit IN BRIEF By LAURIE DELATER A Saline contractor last week filed an involuntary bankrup- tcy petition against Unviersity Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) in an attempt to force the regent to pay more than $24,000 in a court-ordered settlement. Last December Washtenaw Circuit Court Judge William Ager, Jr., ordered the Deane Baker Co. of Dearborn to pay the builder, York Contracting Inc., $24,198 to settle a dispute over construction of a group of condominiums in Ann Arbor. THE CONTRACTOR filed suit in 1982, charging that Baker's company failed to pay past bills. Attorneys for Baker's company would not pay for the work because it was unsatisfactory. The court ordered the company to pay within 20 days, but the firm never paid and dissolved a month later on Jan. 1, 1984. York Contracting's latest step is intended to force Baker's defunct firm into bankruptcy, allowing York and other creditors to recover payment through the courts. DAVID FOSTER, attorney for York Contracting, said the Baker Co. violated federal bankruptcy laws when it paid off' loans to Baker without also paying York Contracting - after the court order was handed down. The law, Foster said, directs a company to pay off all creditors equally, and that paying only Baker demonstrated an illegal "preferential Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports transfer." After reviewing the petition, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Detroit could order Baker to return all the assets he received from the company, according to Foster. That money, which York's lawyers said is about $70,000, could then be used to pay off the company's creditors, he said. But Richard Sanders, an attorney representing Baker Co. in the case, called the petition a "red herring" that will be thrown out by the bankruptcy court. "There's no question in my mind that all the transactions by the Deane Baker Co. were in accordance with state laws" he said, adding that those transactions have been properly documented. Baker yesterday would not say whether he will contest the petition during the 20-day answer period. "My only obser- vation is that the company has been dissolved for a year," he said. Law Prof. James White said there is a possibility money could be retrieved through the bankruptcy proceedings. But, he added that "the question that needs to be answered is whether a company that is not in existence could be put into bankruptcy." The bankruptcy court is expected to take up the petition in two weeks. .q U.S. jobles rate stays at 7.5% WASHINGTON - Civilian unemployment leveled off at 7.5 percent in'J- August, the government said yesterday, as new hiring slackened in accom- paniment with the slowing pace of economic recovery. President Reagan's chief spokesman said officials were pleased with "en couraging news that unemployment rates have remained stable." But critics contended the report signaled bad news for workers. Unemployment stood at 7.6 percent when Reagan took office in January, 1981. The number of Americans with jobs at that time totaled 99.9 million, com.- pared with 105 million last month - roughly 425,000 below the level of July and 700,000 beneath the all-time high recorded in June, said the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Michigan's unemployment rate dropped to a 4 -year low last month, the Michigan Employment Security Commission said yesterday. MESC acting director A. R. Jazowski said the number of people without work fell by 50,000 from 506,000 or 11.3 percent in July to 456,000 or 10.3 percent in August. Blanchard pushes health bill LANSING - Gov. James Blanchard yesterday urged lawmakers to pass health care cost legislation during their upcoming session, saying this would aid the current auto talks. Blanchard told reporters the health care package is one of the ad - ministration's top priorities for what it anticipates will be a brief pre- election session beginning next week. Others include long-stalled legislation creating a Michigan Strategic In-' vestment Fund to aid business. Major portions of the health care package have already been adopted. They permit insurers to negotiate agreements with doctors and other health care providers regarding fees and other matters. Baker ...refuses to pay contractor x - The FunenNg hhs e S eanceerMDUJ aanC Niht with Matt emploees Suday:e Sapteoe eandhc6Stubp. italre withPaY La esagN ais dmed freed).,- withLeitert a d fR eleaseN w h i Owend CrJ anda M u si c 5h Energy asA Forue mre-informa6:00P n Froger bics, l6: t ree)- Fr. t {ldies adted %PdMesday La dy e(adies edn NihtWith RandyZ(lde sdaY: oldies Ngh mittedtrend °ro ° 'Joi te weeZedC aturdaY: with andy2. daydsinPrice, Oro onda Saturdalet Pak' g Availale . aapymlmer "y snack 510 East Liberty, Ann Arbor, Michigan - For more inforrnation call: (313) 994-5436 ty, to warn members of the penalties for selling alcohol without a license. Jachalke also talked with Delta Up- silon members, who decided to cancel an all-campus party scheduled for this weekend. ON THURSDAY, the Theta Delta Chi received a call from Jo Rumsey, an administrator in the University Housing office. Rumsey told the frater- nity that she had checked with the city police and informed members that they needed a license to sell alcohol in the city, said Bob Eustice, president of the fraternity. He said that the fraternity had not asked Rumsey to check with police about the license and that they had never acquired one for past Beer Olympics parties. Rumseyssaid she contacted several fraternities about the licenses because many, dormitory residents attend the all-campus parties. HOUSING HAS made a commitment to responsible alcohol use in the dorms, and many of the students attending the Olympics had been dorm residents," said Rumsey. "As an information ser- vice, I called several fraternities and told them about the need for a license. No one is cracking down on the frater- nities, I'm just giving the houses the in- formation they need if they want to sell alcohol at their events." On Rumsey's suggestion, Eustice called Jachalke, who he said informed him that police would close down the party and arrest the organizers if neighbors complained and the frater- nity did not have a license. Jachalke could not be reached for comment yesterday. But Deputy Chief Johnson said that "it is illegal to sell booze or charge ad- mission to a place that sells alcohol without a license. What the fraternities propose to do in their advertising is illegal, and those in charge of the event can be prosecuted." THE FRATERNITY WAS planning to charge admission to the party, Eustice said. Johnson said the fraternity should have obtained the licenses for past par-- ties. But he said that before this year, the police have not known about the parties. Eustice said he cancelled the 50 kegs the fraternity had ordered from Bud- weiser's local distributor after talking to Jachalke. The fraternity members met yesterday and decided they still wanted to hold the party, but Eustice said it was too late to re-order the kegs. "WE WERE WILLING to take the risks to have the event when we realized that no laws had changed from last year," Eustice said. Despite the confusion, however, last night's Mudbowl Mash went off without incident. As the beer flowed from kegs at the bottom of the hill, the band SLK crooned to the strains of their new wave music. The nearby Village Corner market was doing a land office business, while the employees couldn't keep the beer on the shelves long enough to keep up with the demand. When the Mudbowl filled with people the crowd spilled into the street. The only complaint about alcohol consumption came from those who couldn't get enough of it as the crowds swarmed around the kegs. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS 4 BA-2 $ 33 TI 55-2 $33 T-MBA 25 TI-57 22 BA-55 43 sr TI-LCD-PROG 50 BA55 TI66 52 EL5100T $43 PC1250A $80 EL 5500T 70 5 IAI?" CE 125 119 CE 126P 55 PC 1500A 160 EL 512T 28 CE 150 165 HEWLETT-PACKARD LCD PROBLEM SOLVERS HP-11C.Scientific $56 HP-15C Scientific 90 HP-12C Financial 90 HP-16C Programmer 90 State seeks funds to feedhungry LANSING - Hunger has become a chronic problem in Michigan and a major commitment of federal money is required to alleviate it, a state commission reported yesterday. The Michigan Food and Advisory Commission said a $4 billion dollar shift in federal funding is needed nationwide to eliminate undernutrition and the need to beg from private charities. The commission was not able to say precisely how many Michigan residents are hungry, but Wallace Williams, chairman of the panel, said he is convinced hunger has increased. "Hunger that can be remedied through full employment is a preventable health risk," Public Health Director Gloria Smith said. "Hunger that has become a chronic problem as a result of inadequate human relief programs is an indefensible health risk." Cubans jail American for praising invasion of Grenada WASHINGTON - The State Department said yesterday that an American citizen has been sentenced to six years in prison in Cuba for allegedly praising the U.S.-led invasion of Grenada last fall and criticizing Cuba's role on the island. ,The American, whom the State Department refused to identify by name, has said he merely expressed a personal opinion on the Grenada issue in a non-violent manner to a group of Cubans, department spokesman John Hughes said. Hughes said U.S. officials in Havana delivered a note to the Cuban Foreign Affairs Ministry on April 18, asserting that the imprisonment of the American for expressing his opinions was a violation of his human rights and in conflict with the U.N.Declaration of Human Rights. U.S. officials said they were uncertain of the timing of the incident that led to the American's arrest. But, they said, it apparently occurred a short time. after the United States and several other Caribbean countries invaded Grenada 11 months ago and brought to an end the island's four-year-old,' Cuban-backed revolution. Mondale plans 'Reagan tax' Democrat Walter Mondale, who has been prodding President Reagan on the subject, said yesterday he will disclose his/own plans for deficit-cutting tax increases early next week. Campaigning in Georgia, Mondale let it be known he will unveil plans for his "Reagan tax" - so dubbed because it will go to pay off deficits created during the current administration - in Philadelphia Monday. "I demand Ronald Reagan stand up and tell the people of the United State, what he is going to do as president to get those deficits down," Mondale said. He said in July that his own plan would cut the deficit by two thirds, but he has given few details since.. Vol. XVC - No. 3 Member of the Associated Press The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967X) is published Tuesday through Sun- day during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the spring and summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: September through April-$16.50 in Ann Arbor, $29.00 outside the city; May through August-$4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second-class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send ad- dress changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Police. pressure stifles beer bashes (Continued from Page 1) 0 14 WHEN aREAK " AAVE TASTE FOR FASTOR MUNCHIES.. . ... sign up for Entree Plus - the pre-paid supplemental meal plan for all U-M students. If you already have our Entree lunch & dinner plan, use Entree Plus to pay for extra breakfasts and snack bar trips. If you live off campus and don't have Entree, use Entree Plus for any meal, anytime, at any U-M dining facility. Choose the Entree Plus amount that's right for your appetite and budget. Pick the Entree Plus contract amount - from $100 to $400 - sufficient for your needs and add additional amounts at any time. The cost of each Entree Plus meal will be automatically deducted from your pre-paid account whenever you tell the checker to put a meal on your Entree Plus account. Access your Entree Plus account with your regular Entree meal card. (if you don't have Entree, you'll get a special Entree Plus card.) As an Entree Plus customer, you'll also receive: - Cancellation and refund privileges " Delayed billing, so you don't have to pay into your account until you receive a statement " Free guest meal passes and dining room discounts For more information, or to sign up for Entree Plus, go to the Entree Office. Or call 763-4632. Entre(XEntre p~us r HP-4m . . Optical Warnd Card Header Printer (82143A) HP-IL ACCESSORIES HP-IL Module HP- IL Printer!Plotter Acoustic Modern Dig Cassette Drive Thirnet Printer 0S 'DO0 Disk Dive 1 ..$168 , 95 283 395 335 HP-41CV 375 $168 500 Editor in Chief ......................BILL SPINDLE Managing Editors ................. CHERYL BAACKE NEIL CHASE Personnel Editor .......................SUE BARTO Associate Editors ................. LAURIE DELATER GEORGEA KOVANIS THOMAS MILLER Opinion Page Editors................ JAMES BOYD JACKIE YOUNG Magazine Editor.................. JOSEPH KRAUS Associate Magazine Editor .......... BEN YOMTOOB Arts Editors..................FANNIE WEINSTEIN PETE WILLIAMS Associate Arts Editors ................. BYRON BULL ANDY WEINE ARTS STAFF: Joshua Bilmes, Jeff Froomon, Dennis Harvey, Dave Kopel, John Logie, Emily Montgomery. Elizabeth Plum. Chief Photographer ............. DOUG MCMAHON Sports Editor ..................... MIKE MCGRAW PHOTO STAFF: Carol Francavilla, David Frankel, Dan Habib, Jeff Schrier. SPORTS STAFF: Sue Brosner, Joe Ewing, Chris Ger- basi, Tom Keaney, Ted Lerner, Tim Makinen, Adam Martin, Scott McKinley, Barb McQuade, Brad Morgan, Phil Nussel, Sandy Pincus, Mike Redstone, Scott Solowich, Randy Schwartz, Susan Warner, Rich Weides, Andres Wolf. Business Manager ................. STEVEN BLOOM Advertising Manager , . . . MICHAEL MANASTER (HRH) Display Manager.................... LIZ CARSON Nationals Manager ..................... JOE ORTIZ Sales Manager.............. :..DEBBIE DIOGUARDI Finance Manager .......... . .......LINDA KAFTON Marketing Manager .....KELLY SODEN Operations Manager .. . ............. KELLY DOLAN Classified Manager ............. JANICE BOLOGNA PM Acessories disountIe roo Mosterrord or Visa ty moil or phoe Mad Cashiers (heck, Monecy OrdPets Check {2wakr to(It )Sorry no C0ODs AddoSA 0 1Oti item SI 00 ea odd I shpg &blhand! Shpts rolit address odd Two tax Prees subs ro change Wil (n. clls) for fmsca.o~eg. 30-dey rotary policy far dIfdiw swam ediscon ly. ALL E - TK MERCHANDISE IS BRAND NEW. 1ST QUALITY AND COMPLETE. n~ I I -i