Page 2. - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 15, 1985 Residents criticize conference center idea I By AMY MINDELL About 60 Ann Arbor residents told the City Council last night that the proposed Huron Plaza Hotel Conference Center would ruin the charm of the city and worsen already cramped parking conditions downtown. "My husband and I shop downtown every Satur- day .. .a 14-story buildingwill reduce the charm and informality of Ann Arbor. Buildings like (the proposed center) are a dime a dozen," said Beverly Trepeck, an Ann Arbor resident. THE PROPOSED conference center is a $38.8 million project. It would include a 400-room hotel, conference facilities, a retail area, and below- grade parking for 360 cars. The structure would be 13-stories high plus a penthouse. Earlier, residents complained about a proposed ordinance revision concerning below-grade parking thatrwould have to be made in order to meet the developers' plan for the conference cen- ter. Residents felt the proposed change was catering to the developers. "If you will yield to private pressures, then there is no use for a council," said Justin Schwar- tz, an Ann Arbor resident to councilmembers. "IF THIS ordinance is passed to suit developers. it is a very bad precedent to set," he added. "I think that people are really talking from the heart here," said Natural Resources graduate student Steve Latta, "the opposition (his group) has finally organized." "I thank (the Center's proposers) for giving us the chance to organize. . . to help Ann Arborites, and not folks out to make a quick buck," he said. Councilmember Larry Hunter (D-First Ward) said that the council was undecided about the issue, and the public hearing would greatly impact the council's decisions. The council will vote on the ordinance at next week's meeting. Jitterbug not the only Fifties fad 'U' alumni admire (Continued from Page 1) the 30th they have taught over four titude they say they make certain to years. display. THE TWO Ann Arbor residents say "It's giving up a lot of yourself to try they never took their passion for jit- something completely foreign," terbugging seriously until they en- Honeyman says, adding that she and tered a dance competition at the Kruz understand how learning to dance Michigan State Fair in 1982. can be frustrating at first. "We really stress the fun aspect of what we do," says her partner. AT THE CLOSE of the class, Honeyman jokes to encourage her students to rehearse all of the steps they have learned so far this term. "Yo ... class," she yells over the din of the departing students, "next week, remember you have an exam." With the warning, Honeyman and Kruz wind up their Jitterbug class, . PREGNANT? * Free Pregnancy Test * Abortion Information * Confidential Call ro 434-3088 walk-in 529 N. Hewitt "We didn't think we had a chance. . because we didn't have any con- fidence," Kruz recalls. "Then we managed to walk in there and take the whole thing." The pair returned the following year to steal the top prize once more. The victory led them to audition later that year for "Dance Fever" in a Detroit discotheque. ALTHOUGH selected as one of the top dance teams, they didn't make the final cut. But they were en- couraged to try out a second time. After intensive rehearsing for a week, Honeyman and Kruz auditioned - and failed - again. "It was a really interesting ex- perience because (the program's COMPUTER REPAIRS Fast Service Reasonable Rates Ann Arbor Music Mart producers) were interested in people who had good dance technique, but they were also interested in people who had guts to show their skin," Kruz says. HIS COSTUME, consisting of a vin- tage bowling shirt and hers, of a polka dot skirt and cashmere sweater, were perhaps considered too modest. Discouraged, but not undaunted, the couple has gone on to perform elsewhere. And their passion for the past doesn't end when they walk off the dance floor. Both profess to being serious collec- tors of Fifties memorabilia; Kruz says he also picks up art deco from the 1940s, such as pottery, glass objec- ts, and toys. "THE FIFTIES always had this sort of magnetic quality because it was something that I had missed," says the photographer for the Univer- sity's burn center. "I wanted to be a part of it because it seemed like it was a more innocent - more naive time." Honeyman, who grew up dancing to Welcome Students! * DISTINCTIVE COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING for Men and Women " 6 HAIRSTYLISTS DASCOLA STYLISTS Opposite Jacobsons Maple Village 668-9329 761-733 her mother's "Boogie Woogie" recor- ds, says she has been collecting records, clothing, and knickknacks unique to the Fifties for 11 years. "YOU SHOULD see her house!" Kurz interrupts, grinning. "It's a nightmare.' "My house is not a nightmare. Do you really think it is?" Honeyman responds. Although Honeyman admits her living room is a full-blown replica of the standard Fifties household, she protests that the remainder of her house is simply "eclectic." But the Fifties will serve as a theme for the hair salon Honeyman is plan- ning to open shortly. Honeyman, who has been known to twirl a hula hoop at other beauty parlors where she has worked, stresses that she and Kruz's nostalgia for the Fifties isn't just another fad, as may prove true for other Americans their age. "I don't think we got into the Fifties - the jitterbugging or anything - because the Fifties became popular," Kruz agrees. "I think we were just doing what we did and it happened that we were doing it at a time when these things became popular." Profile appears every Tuesday No one faces cancer alone. Callus.M-a AMERK'AN CANCER SOCIETY' IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Rioters kill S.A. Soldier JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Black rioters stabbed and stoned to death a white soldier on patrol near Port Elizabeth, police said yesterday. It was the first death of a white soldier in the line of duty in a 13-month wave of racial violence. Johan Schoeman, 19, died during a clash Sunday night with black rioters. and another white soldier was stabbed in the hand when he came to Schoeman's aid, police said. A Defense Force spokesman said Schoeman was on patrol with other officers in Kwazakele when a mob of several hundred blacks stoned their armored car. The patrol left the vehicle behind and gave chase on foot as the mob scattered pelting the soldiers with rocks. "When the attackers ran away, a number of Defense Force members gave chase on foot, Corporal Schoeman was fatally stabbed in an alley," the spokesman said. Chrysler union strike likely HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. - U.S. and Canadian union officials declared yesterday that a strike against Chrysler Corp. in one or both countries at midnight tonight seemed unavoidable. Union leaders in the United States, bargaining for a contract covering 70,000 workers, said no progress on major issues had been made and time was running short. "I told my fellas to tell their families they'll be eating dinner here tonight and to bring their toothbrushes for tomorrow," United Auto Workers chief negotiator Marc Stepp told reporters yesterday as he en- tered Chrysler headquarters here. In Toronto, UAW of Canada yesterday rejected Chrysler Canada Ltd.'s first proposal on wages and benefits, and broke off bargaining on non- money issues involving its 10,000 members until the company revamped its economic offer. Robert White, the Canadian UAW leader, said it would "take a miracle" to avoid a strike against Chrysler in his country. Kremlin plans to improve Soviet consumer life MOSCOW - The Soviet Union's new plan to improve life for the Soviet people repeats promises Kremlin leaders have made for decades but drops the bombastic vows to provide the world's highest standard of living. The program announced last week is more pragmatic than previous plans and stops short of offering to fully satisfy the country's long- suffering shoppers. Instead of promising to overtake the United States, as Nikita Khrushchev did in the early 1960s, Communist Party chief Mikhail Gorbachev has said the Soviets "do not view socialism as a consumer society." The program therefore envisages relatively modest output of consumer items by Western standards. But it does not fully explain how Gorbachev will accomplish even these limited goals by the year 2000. The only area in which the party promised "complete satisfaction" of consumer demand was ih construction material, sanitary equipment, and gardening tools and supplies. In the new program the party couldn't list every consumer item. So the ones it chose to discuss reveal what's in high demand and short supply, including electronics, shoes, fashionable clothing and household applian- ces. Britain cancels PLO meeting LONDON - Britain canceled at the last minute yesterday its first high- level meeting with two officials of the Palestine Liberation Organization, saying they reneged on a promise to renounce terrorism. Foreign Secretary Geoffrey Howe was to have met with all members of a joint Palestinian-Jordanian peace delegation, including two officials of the PLO's executive committee. Instead, he met only with the Jordanian representatives of the panel, Jordan's foreign minister and deputy prime minister. Howe said the talks were canceled because the two PLO officials, Elia Khoury and Mohammed Milhem, were unwilling to make promised statements on a rejection of terrorism and the right of Israel to exist. "So we couldn't go ahead with the meeting," he said. Cholesterol study wins Nobel CAMBRIDGE, Mass - Research into a rare defect in the body's inter- nal control of cholesterol that won the Nobel prize for two Americans is opening up new strategies for understanding and defeating heart disease, the nation's biggest killer. Drs. Michael Brown and Joseph Goldstein of the University of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas unraveled a flaw in the bodies of people who are struck by heart attacks at unusually early ages. And in the process, they discovered a key mechanism for keeping the body's cholesterol levels in check. The Nobel Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, announced yesterday that the two men, who were attending a conference in Cambridge, had won the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize in medicine. "Practical applications will be forthcoming, we would predict," Gold- steing said at a news conference yesterday. Drug companies have produced several experimental drugs that seem to lower cholesterol levels, but none of these is yet available for routine use. Vol XCVI - No. 29 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in Ann Arbor; $35.00 outside the city. One term - $10.00 in town; $20.00 out of town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and Sub- scribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. 4 A 4 336 S. State 769-4980 14 S E N I 0 R S 14 Your time is almost up. If you still haven't had your senior picture taken, you face the possibility of not appearing with the rest of your class in your edition of U-M's year- book, the 1986 Michigan Ensian. There is no charge and no further obligation. Simply stop in the Ensian office weekdays 9-noon or 1-6. No ap- pointment is necessary. Yearbook Special. 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