Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom cl1.ble it: Wgan ~Iai1r Crocus Sunny with a high near 50. Vol. XCV, No. 134 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, March 21, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages State rep. predicts SMore education increases By KERY MURAKAMI LANSING - State Rep. Morris Hood 1 (D-Detroit) predicted yesterday that the State House of Representatives would include between $5 and $10 million more for higher education in the state budget than the $1.2 billion recommended by Gov. James Blan- chard. Hood, chairman of the House Sub- committee on Higher Education said after a meeting of the subcommittee that any increases would depend on how the legislature decides to use last .year's state budget surplus. "The question," he said, "is whether we have an early tax rollback." THE PROPOSED decrease in state income tax rates to 4.6 percent next January 1, combined with an increase in tax exemptions to $1,750 would cost the state $400 million in next year's See SHAPIRO, Page 2 Testimony conflicts in Daily Photo by KATE O'LEARY Up on the roof Members and friends of Sigma Chi fraternity soak up the sun and slurp leftover green beer yesterday to celebrate the first day of spring. arson By NANCY DRISCOLL The mother of a student accused of setting fire to his Law Quad dorm room in 1983 testified yesterday that she had not washed the pants he was wearing during the fire. Experts had testified earlier in the arson trial of James Picozzi that if he had set the fire there would have been traces of gasoline in his clothes after- wards. But dormitory staff member Dian Nefranowicz said on the witness stand last month that Mrs. Picozzi had told her of washing the pants. "IN NO WAY did I tell her I washed the jeans," Mrs. Picozzi said on the stand yesterday. The disputed conver- sation occurred when Mrs. Picozzi was in town after her son was injured during the fire. She was staying in the Lawyers Club at the Law School. "I didn't even know where the washing machines and dryers were at the Lawyers Club," Mrs. Picozzi said. Picozzi is accused of setting fire to his Law Quad room on March 8, 1983. He filed suit against University Law School Dean Terrance Sandalow, saying his civil rights were violated when San- dalow did not send a letter of good academic standing to Yale Law School on Picozzi's behalf. AT A HEARING conducted on August 30 and 31 last year, U.S. District Court Judge John Feikens did not grant the plaintiff a preliminary injunction but instead directed the parties to conduct an administrative hearing to decide if (Picozzi) set the fire. Peter Davis, an attorney for the University, called James Thomas, the associate dean for admissions and , student affairs at Yale Law School, to testify. Thomas brought Picozzi's admissions file, and said that the defendant, who attended Yale as an undergraduate, was turned down for admission to Yale Law School as a freshman in 1981 and as a second year transfer in 1982. THOMAS SAID that Picozzi reac- tivated his application in 1983. He read aloud the letter that Picozzi wrote to him-on February 9, 1983, stating that he wished to be again considered for Yale's second-year class. Thomas said that Yale normally ac- cepts 10 to 12 transfer students and one to three special status students per year. Davis asked him to read a letter that was written by the defendant's brother, Vincent Picozzi, Jr. to the president of Yale on March 24, 1983. IN THE letter Vincent Picozzi said that "recently a very ugly event took place. A fire was set outside his room," and explained that due to this and previous harrassment, it would be im- possible for his brother to remain at Michigan and that he hoped Yale would consider Picozzi's application. Other letters were read including correspondence between Picozzi and Thomas and letters of recommen- dation. DANIEL CRONIN a Flint attorney, who was a classmate of Picozzi's testified that he was with the defendant on the night of March 7, hours before the fire occurred. Cronin said that he attended a class with Picozzj from 7 to 9 p.m. and after- See 'U', Page 2 Union Carbide blames workers DANBURY, Conn. (UPI) - Contamination of a storage tank, possibly caused by sabotage, was responsible for a gas leak that killed more than 2,500 people at Union Carbide's plant at Bhopal, India, corporation officials yesterday. They also said the plan was riddled with safety violations. Company officials did not pinpoint - blame for history's worst chemical disaster and said production of the deadly gas would resume next month in its In- stitute, W. Va., plant. Production was halted there af- ter the Bhopal disaster. IN A REPORT compiled by Union Carbide scien- tists and technicians from the United States, the company said 120 to 240 gallons of water "inadverten- tly or deliberately" was allowed to contaminate an underground storage tank in the Bhopal plant. The mixture started a runaway chemical reaction that leaked a deadly cloud of methyl isogcyanate gas over the sleeping city of Bhopal on Dec. 3, 1984, killinig more than 2,500 poeple and injuring thousan- ds more. Union Carbine Chairman Warren Anderson stop- ped short of directly charging sabotage, but said the company could not rule out the possibility that con- timination may have been deliberate. "THE AMOUNT of water that got into this tank took a while to get in there," he said at a news con: ference. "That's why he said it might be deliberate. I can impugn malice here. I can't say it's an act of sabotage:" When pressed, however, Anderson said, "It doesn't seem like something that is inadvertent." Anderson said civil and criminal action is pending in India against individual employees of Union Carbide. bide India Ltd., and the Indian government is conduc- ting a criminal investigation. "THE ISSUE of fault is before the courts both here and in India. In light of those proceedings, we will confine (remark) to what happened and not who was at fault," he said. Ron Van Mynen, corporate director of health and safety for Union Carbide and chairman of the in- vestigating team, said a refrigeration unit crucial to controlling chemical reaction had been out of operation for five months before the leak. See COMPANY, Page 3 rty}y ":r. J........ .W:VJ::1V: . rtJ". ."r: ::.".":: r.,.. " ...... ............... ... r................ ". r............. ,tV. ::r. "y"r " "... "...rr:. r.r:. :. ::. ::JJr:rrr::.:1":::.V ".1"A ...... r......... .. .......... ......... .... .. 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Y" rY"".; ... 11.,.......: rp h,... .1WJ h"". Jr" L try,; 'Vr'v1;.,.:1:j:':: :': t{'" :1.. "2 '":J + .: .v ... J.,1...... .......v...,LO;: :1,.i.. L. t i,.:..L: t 3 . ". rrt:-...".. vim.. "s::::: " ":"X^C . 11 .:. }. / '14..... .-,.::. ... ...:"J:+"r.r......vr. r.. rJ.Ltar'3y1 ...1. ..::.- .....1.n.-.:v: :.. n...,... .".:J{t x.., r..r":"Sn.,r.. Lt.,. "^rR. """ "' t ., .... ..... ......n....... ,.... r.. .. ..oo h b..c"Z.w'fih". ?:C :"t 4W ...... .ti;"; ": ets' .. .... >.. . ,.,..::..:... :.... J. ..t JAl. "i": ". ;".... : .., t .1{{'}Y.'rt : " {,'...L .. _ }}}}}i\ r.t Sorority 's housing addition rejected By SUSAN GRANT The Ann Arbor Zoning Board of Appeals voted yesterday 4- 3 to deny the Collegiate Sorosis Sorority's request to build an addition to a house because the plan violated three zoning codes.. "The addition can be developed within the zoning ordinan- ces if you change the plan," said board member Nancy White. TO CONFORM to zoning codes the current plan needs a wider driveway, parking spaces that are farther from the building, and a wider space between properties. Last week the Ann Arbor Planning Commission voted to allow the sorority to move into the house at 903 Lincoln and build an addition despite objections from neighbors. The neighborhood is zoned for both single family homes and group dwellings, but a group who wants to move in must get the Planning Commission's approval first. HOWEVER, THE commission did not accept the plan for building the addition, forcing the sorority to go to the Zoino Board of Appeals. The sorority had hoped the Zoning Board would waive some codes and accept its proposed plan. Neighbors opposing the addition say the balance of the neighborhood between single family homes and group homes is endangered. Gerald Lax, the sorority's attorney, told the board they should not consider whether the sorority should be in the neightborhood, but rather whether the zoning codes should be waived. "The planning commission already decided the special ex- See PANEL, Page 3 ... . . . . . . . . . . .."{;.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......:"::.::v.,:::::.v:::v::: :.: ...i".v ..:. Three candidates vie for MSA presidency By AMY MINDELL DIANA SAID he is confident despite Three students declared their can- 'Generally, MSA has totally lost sight of the fact that his party contains only five didacy for the Michigan Student what the proper role of student government members. "If I got all of South Quad to Assembly presidency in time for , vote for me, I'd win. Our objective is to yesterday's 5 p.m. filing deadline. is.a mobilize people to vote." c Daily Photo by KATE O'LEARY Elizabeth Douvan, the leading candidate in the Residential College's search for a new director, addresses students and faculty at East Quad yesterday.. RC stuetfaculty quizpotential director By SEAN JACKSON Approximately 80 students and faculty of the Residential College en- thusiastically received. Elizabeth Douvan, the leading candidate in the RC's director search, in a panel discussion at East Quad yesterday. The LSA Executive Committee recently approved Douvan as the program's new director pending the approval of the Residential College community and her acceptance of the position. DOUVAN HAS not yet decided whether to replace outgoing director John Mersereau, who announced last fall that he plans to step down in June when his current term expires. See RC, Page 2 The three represented the MUM (Moderates of the University of Michigan), MOVE (Make Our Votes Effective), and Voice parties. Each party offers a presidential and vice presidential candidate and candidates for seats on the assembly. MOVE has a itotal of five candidates, while MUM has :25 and Voice has 27. VOICE PRESIDENTIAL candidate Paul Josephson, an LSA junior, charac- terized his party as "young but ex- perienced." Josephson and running mate Micky Feusse, an LSA sophomore, said they would maintain -MSA's present structure. Josephson said the party would con- centrate on increasing minority recruitment and retention, fighting a student code of non-academic conduct, and working on issues of interest to women such as increased anti-rape programs. MUM offers a slightly different ap- proach. Presidential candidate Kevin Michaels is an MSA member who feels that the assembly "has totally lost sight of what the proper role for student government is." HE AND RUNNING mate Thomas Shelby lead a "diverse group," accor- ding to Michaels, an engineering senior. Shelby is an LSA junior. Michaels said that the present assem- bly receives little respect from students and the administration and suffers from a public relations problem. "Students ask themselves 'why should I vote?' and 'what does MSA do for.me besides all that radical stuff?' " said Michaels. - Kevin Michaels. Candidate for MSA president Michaels said his party's number one priority is a campus escort service. "I AM VERY confident in my leader- ship ability," he said. "We don't want to screw up the University." LSA sophomore Alex Diana is the presidential candiate for the MOVE party. Diana's party will concentrate on "using University resources for students, compromising with the administration - for example, a reasonable compromise on the code," he said. Diana, president of the South Quad Council, and running-mate Casey Whitehead, an LSA sophomore, see in MSA "A potential for great help to students that is not being fulfilled now." "Whether it is MSA's fault or the students, there is not a lot of interest in what MSA is doing," he said. "I don't feel that MSA voices views of a majority of students on campus . . . I , think that there are a lot more conser- vatives on campus." In the April 9 and 10 elections, all students will be able to vote for a president and vice president and students from each of the University's schools and colleges will elect their representatives to the assembly. There are also 17 independents filed for candidacy. The schools of Education, Social Work, and Music do not have candidates Election director Rob Markus said the election "is going pretty well so far, despite such obstacles such as apathy. My goal is to have 10,000 voters" (as opposed to 4,000 last year.) TODAY Beef or bull? CONGRESSIONAL aides dined on fried vegetable balls at a meatless lunch in honor of the Great American Meatout, a vegetarian group's call for a cutback in the consumption of what they call an unhealthy food. But a beef industry blasted the "overzealous rhetoric." At least one congressman attended health of the public is not served by false statements, misleading arguments and overzealous rhetoric." "I think that the brochure manages to convey a good deal of misin- formation about red meat in health," said Roy Rogers, executive director of the Nebraska Beef Industry Development Board. Birthday flight operated by British Airways, will fly from Omaha to New York at subsonic speeds before refueling for the supersonic flight to London. Mayoral madness What was billed as a sober look at how two mayors of New York governed the nation's largest city instead became a bit of a comedy affair. Mayor Edward Koch, en- age of police officers in high-crime areas such as The Bronx and Manhattan. He said officials told him most have less than three years' on-the-job experience, and that a better officer often was the one with more years on the job. Koch quickly shot back: "But the policemen with less than three years' experience can run as fast as the felon.' I .I