In__eekenMagazine: Ciccone Youth * 'Belizaire the Cajun' Experiential Learning * Mike Fisch E Alit i au Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, September 26, 1986 aIt41 ol. XCVII - No. 17 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Twelve Pages I minoes to provide tiue test for Blue By MARK BOROWSKY Ah, Homecoming. At Michigan, Homecoming traditionally means reminiscing with old friends, heart-warming walks through the diag, and the Wolverines beating the crap out of me third-division bozo. ALTHOUGH traditions - refined or otherwise - are hard to change, Homecoming 1986 will be different as Florida State rolls into Michigan Stadium tommorow at 12:30 to play the Wolverines for the first time ever. The Seminoles (1-1-1 and ranked 20th by the Associated Press) aren't the usual sacrifical fering for the alumni. The Wolverines are a nine- point favorite against the Seminoles. Obviously, the oddsmakers haven't seen Michigan's first two games, lackluster performances against supposedly inferior teams. In both, it was impossible to tell if Michigan played at the competition's level or if, god forbid, they just aren't that good. TOMMOROW'S game should ustrate the correct point of view. Despite its .500 record, Florida State is Michigan's toughest contest to date. When its game is on, meaning that it plays suffocating defense and a balanced offense, Florida State looks mighty fine-and a lot like Michigan. Bo Schembechler is mighty worried-imitation may lead to the Wolverines'first loss. "The key to beating them is 'ow well our defense plays," the Michigan head coach said. "Our defense has got to tighten up. We can't let this team (Florida State) possess the football like the last two have done to us. "I'm not sure whether we can do that or not." See '1', page 10 Tax reform passes by big margin Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY TAs get tough About 70 teaching assistants march in protest of the University's current contract offer in front of Regent's Plaza yesterday. If an agreement is not reached between the GEO and the University at today's mediation, GEO employees said that a strike vote will be authorized. Policy center studies WASHINGTON (AP)-The House of Representatives voted 292-136 yesterday for landmark legislation that would change the way most Americans pay their income taxes while shifting a big share of the burden to cor- porations. The bill was hailed as the most thorough income-tax revision ever. The political breakdown: 176 Democrats and 116 Republicans voted yes; 74 Democrats and 62 Republicans voted no, with many of them expressing concern about the bill's impact on an economy plagued by sluggish growth. THE MARGIN of victory for the measure was more over- whelming than even its staunchest supporters had pre- dicted. Some had forecast it would pass by 30 to 50 votes. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Reagan "welcomes today's vote by the house." Rep. Dan Rostenkowski (D- Ill.), a chief author of the bill, said, "We are going to let the American people know that their legislative process is working, that when they request of their leaders in Washington a change, that we respond." THE LEGISLATION, he added, responds to a public demand "that the family down the street or the corporation across town can't beat the system any longer." "We must not pass up this historic opportunity to make a contribution to those elements of the American economy that have long been neglected: the working poor, the family, labor, and capital," said Rep. Jack Kemp (R- N.Y.). The bill would cut individual and corporate tax rates deeply and eliminate or reduce several deductions and exclusions, in- cluding those for Individual Retirement Accounts, consumer interest, and sales taxes. On the average, individual taxes would be cut about 6.1 percent - less than $4 a week - and more than 6 million working poor would be dropped from the tax rolls. Several million, couples and individuals would face tax increases. OV E-R the next five years, corporations would pay a $120 billion greater share of the tax burden and business would lose a. major incentive for job-creating' investments - changes that worry some lawmakers and economists. Some congressmen spoke against the measure - expressing fears that it would damage an already sluggish economy, impose another burden on the middle class, or' destroy jobs in their districts. Rep. Bill Archer (R-Texas), said, "There is both good and bad in this bill. The the risks See TAX, Page 2 Organ By ELLEN FIEDELHOLTZ The University Medical Center's Organ Transplant Policy Center, the only such center in the-nation, goes beyond the traditional medical aspects of transplants to study other factors: psychological effect, costs of transplantation, organ availability, delivery systems, and ethical issues. Organ transplants are the only effective treatment for many rans lantation diseases and are being performed with increasing frequency and success. The Unversity Medical Center, for example, performs 100 kidney transplants annually, according to Jeremiah Turcotte, director of the policy center. ALONG with the increasing popularity of organ transplants come complex social and ethical issues. According to Arthur Caplan, an authority on ethical issues and organ transplants who spoke at the University last week, the public views organ transplantation with awe, but also believes some physicians make organ transplant decisions unfairly. According to Dave Friedo, public relations director of the University Hospitals, incidents such as this year's "Baby Jesse" case have fostered this view. Friedo said that the baby was See TRANSPLANT, Page 3 ew building cramps students By ROB EARLE The new Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) building will be dedicated tomorrow on time and within its $30 million budget, but some students are complaining bout cramped classrooms, nadequate parking, and inefficient busing to the North Campus structure. The building features a Solid State Electronics Laboratory capable of producing advanced electronics microchips in an environment free of dust. IT ALSO houses laboratories for developing computers capable of diagnosing human illnesses, nd designing machines that can interpret visual input, much like thi- human brain interprets what .ne eyes perceive. The EECS was completely funded by the state, though the University must provide $10 million more to equip the labs. Some students complain that the EECS is too far away and that it lacks parking places. "WE DO need some parking," Said one electrical engineering senior who asked not to be identified. "On Central Campus it's understandable," he said. "But there's plenty of room up here." Erdogan Gulari, the College of Engineering's associate dean for academic affairs, said 100 paid parking spaces were opened up for students behind North Campus Commons, with more planned in the future. He also noted there were two commuter lots available with no charge for parking. ASSISTANT Parking Operations Manager Max Smith said there are several spaces available for students in the commons lot that remain unsold. Smith said the adoption of a permit system for parking at family housing units on North Campus also contributes to the parking shortage. "Students used to park there for free," Smith said, "but then there was no place for the residents to park." Another problem is crowded North Campus buses because more Engineering classes were moved to the EECS. "THE BUSES are very overcrowded," said electrical engineering senior Keith Korecky. Students are frequently forced to stand in the aisles. University Transportation officials refused to comment. Gulari said most engineering classes have been moved to North Campus, and all are expected to meet there next term. Many students like the new building, but complain about classrooms being too small. "THE engineers have always had shitty buildings," said one electrical engineer. He said one class he had in West Engineering his freshman year was cancelled because a light fell out of the ceiling. He added that he saw a professor pull a projection screen out of the ceiling in one of the new EECS classrooms the first week of classes. Despite the problems, officials have scheduled the building's dedication for tonight at 8:30, in the midst of Homecoming See EECS, Page 5 x Chavez calls for boycott of grapes By EUGENE PAK Cesar Chavez, president and founder of The United Farm Workers, last night urged Americans to boycott grapes to help supp1t the plight of migrant farm workers. Spealing before an enthusiastic capacity audience at Rackham Amphitheater, Chavez, 59, expined that pesticides used to preserve grapes harm both farm workers and consumers. THE UFW is focusing its efforts on abolishing the use of five pesticides, including Captan, a carcinogen which is designed to "preserve the life of the grapes See UNION, Page 5 Daily Photo by JAE KIM Crowded classrooms contrast sharply to the spacious strium of the new Electrical Engineering and Computer Science building. TODAY- Morning espresso The WDTX "Morning Express" is coming to Ann Arbor today. Jeff Knurek, a sophomore 4. 0~. .. , A '4 ;r. 4-; rr l-mn e l n ck tu i was broadcast from the kitchen of Allison Brunner's Ypsilanti home. Brunner said. she believed that she had been picked because she promised the DJs "popovers and a real good breakfast." The disc jockeys did, "all kinds of crazy things," including a play-by-play on the rise of her popovers, and a mock "Newlywed the Rock, the Cube, or an English textbook- and advance to Registration. In Michiganopoly, a new board game modeled after the Parker Brothers game Monopoly, you can condense a myriad of University experiences into an hour or two of fun. Players collect credit hours and diplomas as they go around the board, which is INSIDE REDEDICATION: Opinion encourges renewed commitment to bring down apartheid and rcism. See Page 4. I C