Tally Hall Mall set to open in April The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 31, 1986- Page 3 City board rejects divestment resolution By KURT SERBUS Tally Hall, the ill-fated indoor mall vhich was set to open last July, still stands incomplete on the corner of E. Washington and S. Division Streets. The $9 million-plus project, which vill have two levels of stores and a 00-space parking structure, was sup- posed to be completed in time for the 1985 Art Fair. The city's engineering Sdepartment now estimates that April 1986 will be the earliest opening date. THE PROJECT is modeled after the highly successful Tally Mall in Farmington Hills. It was initially iproposed in January 1982 and ap- proved by City Council in September 1983. The F.J. Jones Construction Company won the right to build Tally Hall. The city has imposed a $500-a-day fine on F.J. Jones because of the delay. This damage assessment took effect last July 13, the day the project !was supposed to have been com- pleted. The assessment will be deducted 'from the city's final payment to the construction company when the project is finished. ACCORDING to Molly Resnik, a Tally Hall leasing agent, no tenants have cancelled their leases because of the delay. City Hall and the construction com- pany disagree on who is responsible for the delay. Bruce Laidlaw, the city attorney, :said F. J. Jones Co. has "given a long ,list of grievances in writing and have various ways of trying to blame it on the city." He said that the city has denied all of Jones' claims. WHEN THE company delayed work in order to winterize the site, the city *:refused to legitimize their "reasonable delay" because the project was supposed to have been completed before this winter, Laidlaw said. David Todd, a project engineer in the city's engineering department said F. J. Jones made three major claims blaming the city for the delay. "They initially claimed that we delayed them in occupying the site due to overhead utility lines. They said the necessary relocations of the lines drove them into working into the winter," Todd said. But the city denied this claim because of contrac- tual stipulations stating that the com- pany had to occupy the site "as is," or remove the lines themselves. A SECOND dispute arose when the city became concerned that the com- pany was using the wrong kind of con- crete in construction. "Our records showed that they had used a weaker type of concrete than they were supposed to for a particular. pier, so we had an agency test the i concrete," Todd said. The city records turned out to be correct, but the pier was allowed to stand because the concrete used was of adequate strength. The testing caused a delay in construction, however, and F. J. Jones claimed that the delay was the city's fault, Todd said. The final claim is the result of a discrepancy over when the company was to be allowed to begin work on the project. "They were delayed because they anticipated taking over the site on a particular day. However, the wording of the bid said that we could hold onI for two months before taking the lowest bidder. But they anticipated beginning work before that time was up," Todd said. Frank Jones, president of F. J. Jones, said he is appealing the city's decision to deny their claims. He had no further comment. By AMY MINDELL Despite pressure from the mayor and the City Council, Ann Arbor's pension board on Wednesday voted 5-4 not to divest $18 million in stocks held in companies that operate in South Africa. Instead, the board members unanimously accepted a resolution to support peaceful change in South Africa "within the confines of the duties created by the law," and agreed to continue discussing the political and legal issues that surround divestment. THE TRUSTEES who voted against divestment questioned whether the action would have been legal if motivated only by moral or social reasons, and whether it would have any impact on the white government in South Africa. Last October the City Council direc- ted the pension board to divest. The directive was first introduced by Council-member Larry Hunter (D- First Ward). He and Mayor Ed Pierce pressured the board by threatening to remove the five trustees who are ap- pointed to their positions by the City Council if they failed to carry our divestment. The pressure tactic worked on Alan Burns, the city controller. "I voted yes, but I voted that way because of comments from some councilmem- bers that I could be removed from the job (if I don't)," he said last night. BURNS ALSO said he was angered that the council was directing the board's investments because the pen- sion money belongs to city employees. Under state law and the city char- ter, the board has complete control of the city employees' $90 million pen- sion fund. The divestment plan the board voted against called for selling off one-third of the $18 million South African portfolio every year for three years. Trustees have already sold $1.6 million worth of stock holdings in companies which do not adhere to the Sullivan Principles, a set of guidelines to ensure equality for blacks in the workplace. Correction Women can achieve equal strength to men, but their muscle size may be limited due to hormonal factors. A story in Wednesday's Daily incorrec- tly reported that a hormonal im- balance prevents women from mat- ching men in muscle strength. David Waymann is an exercise physiologist who does consulting for the University's Department of Recreational Sports. The Daily in- correctly reported Wednesday that he consults for the Fitness Research Center. Daily Photo by MATT PETRIE The Tally Hall Mall on the corner of E. Washington and S. Division is set to open for business in April. Senate co-mmittee to vote on smoking bill Meuif'shusband issues stat CONCORD, N.H. - Christa - M VcAuliffe's students returned to classes yesterday, quietly sharing their grief over her death in the Challenger disaster while her husband thanked a mourning nation for its support and said, "We have all lost Christa." "We wish we could comfort all of you as you have conforted each of us," said Steven McAuliffe, in a statement issued by his Concord law office on behalf of himself and his children, Scott, 9, and Caroline, 6. IT WAS HIS first public comment since he watched shuttle Challenger explode Tuesday and take the lives of Christa, 37, and six other astronauts McAuliffe and his children have been in seclusion in Florida since the disaster. "To the families of the other crew members we send our love and share their sorrow," McAuliffe said. "We thank you for respecting our privacy and for sharing our grief." "My children and I are very aware of the tremendous outpouring of grief and support across America," he said. "We have all lost Christa." MCAULIFFE, WHO WAS to be the first "ordinary citizen" to orbit the Earth, was one of the most popular teachers at Concord High School, where she taught the past four years. Classes were canceled Wednesday but students returned yesterday and Principal Charles Foley described the mood as "extremely somber. You could hear pins drop all over the place." Meanwhile, in Moscow, the Soviet Union said that the seven people who perished in the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger will not have died in vain if the accident prompts the United States to reconsider its "Star ment Wars" program. THAT ASSESSMENT, which con- trasted with otherwise sympathetic Soviet coverage of Tuesday's disaster, appeared in reports by the state- controlled news service Tass. Similar comments were offered Wednesday by Roald Sagdeyev, the director of the Space Research Institute. "Experts say that the Challenger's explosion is a serious warning to those planning to deploy arms systems in space," said one of two reports filed from Tass' Washington Bureau. "The seven crew members of the challenger spaceship have met their tragic deaths not only for the great cause of space exploration," it said. THEIR DEATHS, which came after the shuttle lifted off from its pad at Cape Canaveral, Fla., may also help prevent "the deaths of billions of people because now mankind has become more deeply aware of the terrible danger that deployment of arms systems in space represents to our planet." The Tass dispatch was the most openly political comment on the disaster in the Soviet media. National television gave a full five minutes of generally sympathetic coverage to the accident Wednesday night, shocking viewers with graphic pic- tures of the explosion and the faces of horrified onlookers. The Tass articles said the accident demonstrated the dangers in President Reagan's dream of a space- based anti-missile shield, which would rely on the flawless performan- ce of orbiting computer-controlled defenses. "In the event of deployment of a space arms network by the U.S.A., a tragic chance occurrence may have irreparable consequences," it said. (Continued from Page 1) The state Public Health Department would be in charge of enforcing the proposed law through county health departments. Proprietors of public places who have no control over seating arrangements would be excluded from the penalties. "If a fraternity wanted a party and rented the hall, and the owner of the hall had nothing to do with the seating," Cargill explained, "(the party-goers) could smoke there" even if smokers and non-smokers were seated together. The bill does not specify how the policy appliesto a residence hall room shared by both a smoker and a non- smoker. Cargill said individual universities will have to settle that question. Although the bill has failed to gai-1 widespread support in the past, Ehlers said he is confident that this 40 & year will be different. But Harris McClamroch, an engineering professor who sits on the Senate Assembly's Financial Affairs Committee, said he does not expect the measure to pass, adding "that the University might continue to take a leading position in this (issue)." ------e-e .... COUPON-.. .... with this entire ad $1.00 oft adult eve. admission.1 or 2 tickets.Good all features t hru 216186 except0F F (N Te.SniradLtehos S"M" TesSenir and Lte Shows PRIZZIIS (DAILY) HONOR (R SOWSRAN Call for show times. ann arbor civic theatre main street production * ---------- present. *LON4E STAR 4 *and ' * * * -2 one-act plays by James McClure January 23, 24, 25, 30, 31 * 8:00 p.m. February 1 $5 donation * 338 S. Main St. for further information call 662-7282 *************************************************** UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw 663-5560 Dr. Paul Foelber,Interim Pastor LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Sunday Worship 9:15 and 10:30 Bible Study 9:15 Sunday and 7:30 Wednesday Sunday Supper 6:00. * * * COVENANT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday Service: 9:30 a.m. at Mack School 920 Miller, Ann Arbor 10:45 a.m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Study Philip H. Tiews, Pastor For more information call 761-1999. * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave., 662-4466 (between S. University and Hill) Sunday 9:30 and 11: 00 a.m. Coffee Hour - 10:30 social hall Adult Education Classes during both services Campus Group: Coordinator - Jamie Schultze Meets for Communion 7 p.m. Wednes- days. Program follows Dr. William Hillegonds - Sr. Minister AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Huron St. (between State & Division) Sundays: 9:55 worship, 11:25 Bible Study groups for both Undergrads and Graduate Students. Thursdays: 5:30 Supper (free) and Fellowship. Tons of Challenger debris found off of launch site (Continued from Page 1) five of whom live in the Houston 'area. NASA'S investigation of the disaster picked up steam, with engineers across the country gather- ng records on Challenger, its three, main engines, the two solid-fueled booster rockets and the huge fuel tank that erupted into a huge ball of fire. A review board made up of six top agency managers was coordinating the investigaton and a formal review board will be formed later to report its findings on the disaster to Acting Ad- ministrator William Graham. Although space agency officials said the probe had not been narrowed down to any specific system, speculation centered on the 154-foot external tank because frame-by- frame television pictures showed flame erupting near its base and then spreading to the other side, between the tank and Challenger's black bot- tom. NI(K NOLE BETTE MIDLER - RKHARD DREYFU55