Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom cl ble LIE1i ia hiI1Q Temperate The snow showers end today. Sunshine and highs in the mid-to- upper 20s. oI. XCV, No. 114 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, February 16, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages -- Misplaced snowbound cars get $20 tickets By STACEY SHONK Like many students, Janice Irwin returned )to her car yesterday to find the street plowed and a $20 ticket on her windshield. Irwin's car and others found in violation of the city's snow emergency procedures were towed in order to allow snowplows to clear the streets. The cars were then put back in place and ticketed $20. IRWIN SAID she didn't know about the city's odd-even parking system. On , the even days of the month, drivers are prohibited from parking their cars on the side of the street with even street numbers. On odd days, cars shouldn't be parked on the odd numbered side of the street. The snow emergency was not ' publicized enough according to Irwin. The City's Department of Transpor- See CARS, Page 2 Regents turn down PIRGIM Daily Photo by MATT PETRIE A city snow emergency brought out the plows and the tow trucks yesterday. Parked cars that got in the way were moved to clear snow, put back in place, and ticketed $20. 'U' Towers tenants withhold rent By NANCY DRISCOLL In what Regent Deanne Baker ter- med "a victory for students," the University's Board of Regents yester- day voted to terminate PIRGIM's special funding contract with the University, which had allowed them a checkoff box on class registration for- ms for more than a decade. By a 6-1 vote, the board, passed Regent Thomas Roach's (D-Saline) ammended version of the Public In- terest Research Group In Michigan's (PIRGIM) original proposals which asked for a one-year extension of its current funding contract. It also asked for the establishment of a committee to study alternative funding systems. BAKER (R-Ann Arbor) said the amendment did three things. It rejec- ted PIRGIM's proposals; it im- mediately terminated the University's current contract with PIRGIM; and it grants PIRGIM a transition period through March registration. Roach said that under bylaws created in 1972, any organization that had the original support of 50 percent of the student population and one-third sup- port thereafter would by eligible for the special funding mechanism. PIRGIM's 1972 organizers garnered the necessary number of petition signatures proving broad campus support pnd qualified for the system. Because of changes in the registration process, Roach said that in subsequent contracts with PIRGIM the regents lowered the margin of support needed to 25 percent, 20 percent, and finally waived the requirement altogether. AFTER MARCH, the group will have to once again show that half the student body at the University backs is policies if it hopes to qualify fop- the checkoff system. Regent Baker, a long-time opponent of the group, said he estimated that over the years PIRGIM "has taken some $734,000 from this campus." He said that student support for PIRGIM last year was only 11 percent. . "What that indicates is that it was rejected by the students at' large," Baker said. "It's time we ceased this charade of saying the organization represents all students." JAMES BRINKERHOFF, the University's chief financial officer, threw his support to PIRGIM's original request for another year to work out See REGENTS, Page 3 Poss ible cuts for all schoo l~ Frye says"- By KERY MURAKAMI Predicting a gloomy financial outlook for next year's campus budget, Univer- sity Vice President for Academic Af- fairs and Provost Billy Frye yesterday announced that he's warned college deans, of a possible one percent c in their school's funding. Frye, addressing the Universit regents, said that he has also warned the deans to be prepared to redirect their funds to compensate for any "high priority needs that aren't currently provided for." "IT MAY BE a tight budget this year," Frye said. He added that the See FRYE, Page 3 By THOMAS HRACH Three groups of tenants in the University Towers apartment complex have decided to withhold their February rent saving their apartments did not meet minimum city heating stan- dards. Last Tuesday, the tenants received a "seven day notice to quit" from the building management. It instructed the renters to either pay their rent within Wne week or face legal action by the landlord. STANLEY POLLACK, an attorney with Student Legal Services, has ad- vised the three groups to place their rent in an escrow account until the situation has been resolved. By depriving the landlord of rent paymen- ts, the tenants hope to pressure the building management into meeting nant demands for, repairs and com- pensation. The Ann Arbor housing code states jackets." that each rental property must be capable of heating every unit to 70 PARIKH, who is a third floor resident degrees fahrenheit, three feet above the of the building, on South Forest and floor, when the temperature is above South University sts., said there were 'We first got upset about the problem when on Super Bowl Sunday we could see our own breath. There were even nights when we went to bed with winter jackets.' - Mike Parikh LSA senior said that the situation has improved only because of the warming of outside temperatures. "It seems to me that the management is taking advantage of us just because of our ages," said Kim Chubka, a business school junior who also is placing rent in escrow. "My parents wouldn't put up with this, but many students will." George Cavas, manager of 'U' Towers, refused to comment about the individuals who withheld their rent, but did say that when the temperature out- side gets extremely cold the building has provided space heaters for the apartments. CAVAS ALSO said that whenever the management has problems with tenan- ts who do not pay their rent, they take the case first to the University's mediation service. See TENANTS, Page 3 minus 10 degrees fahrenheit outside. "We first got upset about the problem when on Super Bowl Sunday we could see our own breath," said Mike Parikh, and LSA senior. "There were even nights when we went to bed with winter nights at the end of January when the temperature dropped to 52 degrees fahrenheit in his apartment. Though the management cleaned out their heating registers and did some caulking around the windows, Parikh Metal mouth Teen pulls gun on orthodontist GROSSE POINTE WOODS, Mich. (AP)A 15-year-old boy who was determined to be rid of his braces pulled a gun on an orthodontist and told him he didn't care about going to jail, "as long as I can have my bands off," the doctor said yester- -day.' Police eventually disarmed the boy after a struggle in 'which two shots were fired into the floor, Grosse Pointe Woods Public Safety Director Jack Patterson said yesterday. THE ORTHODONTIST, who was not the boy's own dentist, said he stalled the teen-ager during the Feb. 8 incident by removing a few of the bands and a wire that ringed his teeth. The boy was not identified because of his age. The doctor said he had attended a meeting a few days before the incident at which the boy's regular orthondontist warned colleagues to be alert for a young patient seeking removal of a set of braces. The suburban Detroit orthodontist involved in the incident, who spoke yesterday to the Associated Press on the con- dition his name not be used, said he first told the youth he would have to get his parents' permission and records from the boy's regular dentist because the work on his teeth was not complete. The youth was taken to the state Hawthorne Center for psychiatric evaluation, then released to his mother later in the day, Patterson said. There were no other patients in the office at the time of the incident, the orthodontist said. "He was the last patient of the morning, fortunately." Women reveal sex habits in survey NEW YORK (AP)-Most American women in their 20s who have never been married are sexually active, and a total of 82 percent have had sex at some time, a survey says. Fifty-three percent of women in that population group had intercourse in the four weeks preceding the survey, ac- cording to a study in Family Planning Perspectives, published by The Alan Guttmacher Institute. THAT COMES to about 4.3 million women, out of about 8 million women in the nation aged 20 to 29 who've never married, the study says. A total of about 5.6 million of the women had sex in the six months preceeding the survey, researchers said. The estimates are based on 1982 population figures. About 40 percent of the women who had had sex had gotten pregnant. Nearly all the women who had sex used contraception at some time, and 78 per- cent practiced some form of birth con- trol in their most recent intercourse. But on average, the women didn't start using contraception until eight months after their first intercourse, the survey found. B-school grads face bright future By CARRIE LEVINE Last in a series "The job opportunities for business school graduates are excellent this year," said Peggy Carroll, director of the placement office at the University's ~usiness school. On-campus recruiting is up 10 per- cent this year and starting salaries have jumped an average of 7 percent. Moreover, the burgeoning small business market offers a potential plethora of jobs for business majors. A SURVEY conducted by the School of Business of its 1984 graduates - which officials say is representative of schools nationwide - showed that a large number of bachelor's and master's students opted for jobs in the aerospace and electronics manufac- turing fields. Commercial banking and public accounting were the most ters of Business Administration (MBA) degree holders and two-thirds of the Bachelor of Business Adminstration (BBA) graduates. MBA's were hired at a starting salary of $32,000, while BBA's received their offers at $23,000, the survey indicated. Though MBA graduates are generally perceived as being hired by large corporations, there actually is a trend toward small and medium-sized firms. "DURING THE 1960's, the vast majority of graduates went into big business," said Richard Temkin, deputy director of the Small Business Association's Detroit branch. See SMALL, Page 2 popular non-manufacturing jobs chosen. And an overwhelming number of the graduates found jobs in the Mid- west - three-quarters of the Mas- Packing it in Daily Photo by ANDI $CHREIBER Members of the Latin American Solidarity Committee rehearse a "sleep-in" at Congressman Carl Pursell's office. The protesters say they are against U.S. policy in Central America. See page 3 for the story. TODAY Another Reagan in pictures f" tep aside Ron, Nancy, Patti, and Ron Jr., still an- but Reagan doesn't want to discuss offers. Reaganj joins the movie careers of the president and first lady, his stepsister Patti's acting and singing career. Stepbrother Ron, once a ballet dancer, is now a correspondent for the. Source Radio Network. Michael Reagan, who was involved in a public spat with stepmother Nancy last year, said he hasn't told his family about his plunge into show business. "Dn vn tell vnr narents everything you do?" he asks. were sent to all students, faculty and staff members and the gesture cost the four students $20 apiece. But it was well worth it, they said, because people were thanking them all day long. The message inside the heart was this: "On this special Thursday whether you know it or nay, We just want to say, without any delay or a silly cliche, that in some unique way, you're a loveable, beautiful person. OK?" manicurist Ros Scott, 65, and asked, "Have you got any miracle cures?" Scott suggested applying bitter aloe, a nasty-tasting laxative. The princess grimaced. "I think I'm too old to stop now," she replied. i I I