Cl be tgan Iai1 Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom *oI. XCVII - No. 21 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 2, 1986 Ten Pages P w Army studies 'abuse in Korea ROTC head denies charges By LESLIE ERINGAARD The United States Army is investigating charges that the head of the Reserve Officers Training Corps at the University ignored widespread abuses by. Army special agents in South Korea. Former special agent Joseph Ditzhazy told The Daily that counter-intelligence agents in South Korea jeopardized national security by abusing their power, thus leaving themselves vulnerable to blackmail. Ditzhazy accused Lt. Col. Charles Narburgh, head of ROTC, and several others of ignoring those abuses. NARBURGH said Ditzhazy is simply bitter because an informal Army investigation found that the charges were without merit. "He's trying to get even by embarassing me and affecting me here," Narburgh said. The United States Army Counter-Intelligence is stationed in South Korea to counter terrorist operations and crack spy rings. Before leaving Korea in May, Ditzhazy filed a 35-page document with the Army's Office of the Inspector General charging that special agents in Korea regularly abused drugs and alcohol, got into fistfights with South Koreans, and flashed special agent badges to avoid detainment by South Korean police. ARMY regulations specify that special agent badges are only to be used in the course of an investigation. The penalty of their misuse can be dismissal. Ditzhazy claimed that he saw special agent Keith Drevecky fondle a South Korean barmaid and slap her when she resisted. Ditzhazy reported that Drevecky flashed his special agent badge to avoid arrest, and that he received only a verbal reprimand for his misconduct. "On at least three occasions in the Sportsman's Club in Itaewoh, I observed Captain Cunningham, commander of the 209th, so heavily intoxicated that he would stagger and fall on the floor and had to be held up by other.officers," Ditzhazy wrote. "TIIE Sportsman's Club had as some of its regular clientele people from Poland, East Germany, Hungary, and the Warsaw Pact countries who were there under cover of construction engineers. The owner of the Sportsman's Club used to discuss the clientele at great length with See ARMY, Page 5 Associated PressI Daniloff returns Press members and cameramen surround reporter Nicholas Daniloff as he returned to the U.S. News and World Report office in Washington yesterday after being held as a spy in the Soviet Union. Architecture dean will stress design By ROB EARLE The new Dean of the College of chitecture and Urban Planning will stress the artistic side of architecture and hopes to develop professional contacts for students. Robert Beckley, who will become dean Jan. 1., said he would like to see a continuation of the college's new stress on the design, or artistic, aspect of architecture, over the structural, or engineering aspect. He plans to augment the college's strength in the mstructural aspects of architecture with a design-orrented program. "DESIGN is what's central to the profession of architecture and planning," Beckley said. "And essentially everything else supports that." Another of Beckley's priorities is establishing additional professional contacts for students seeking internships and jobs. This priority is part of his plan to improve training for both graduate and undergraduate students and attract top students to the school. Beckley was an assistant and associate professor at the University from 1963 to 1969. Since then he has taught at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, where he helped design the architecture curriculum. He has a completely different vision of the new curriculum at the University, however, and says he doesn't want to remake the University's program in the image of Wisconsin' s. "I'M NOT going to throw out the baby with the dishwater," he said. "To turn the program 360 degrees is silly in my mind." master's degree. Beckley would like to make the college's programs more flexible, so that someone with an undergraduate major in something besides architecture could get into the school's graduate program. "My goal is to break these barriers," Beckley said. Currently, the college encourages a "2-2-2" course . of study in which students spend two years studying liberal arts, two years completing the undergraduate architecture requirements, and two years earning a BEAKLEY will succeed retiring Dean Robert Metcalf, who was appointed in 1974. Beckley was selected for his experience and national reputation in both the research and practical areas of architecture, according to James Duderstadt, the University's vice- president for academic affairs. He has received over a dozen awards for his work, including an award from the National Endowment for the Arts and a national award in theater design. Miliken, Blanchard share recovery role Student overnment fills committee sts By LAURA BISCHOFF Michigan's economic recovery can be attributed to a strategy developed by former GOP Gov. William Milliken and picked up by Democratic ;Gov. James Blanchard, according to a University study released yesterday. Milliken's "creation strategy" involved pushing high- technology research in the state, providing money for business expansion, and investing public pension funds in ways that created jobs, according to Institute for Social Research Prof. John Jackson, who wrote the study. MILLIKEN attempted to create new industries in Michigan through various programs , Jackson said. The former Gov. combined the creation strategy with strategies of maintaining the state's existing businesses 0 and attracting others to Michigan, Jackson said. Under Blanchard the maintenance and attraction strategies have been reoriented to supplement the creation strategy, Jackson said. "(Blanchard) has really picked up and emphasized creation strategy," he added. The continuity between administrations has been an important factor in Michigan's comeback, said the study, which was funded by the Committee for Economic Development, a non- profit organization of business and education officials. And no matter who is in the governor's office next year, creation strategy should be continued, Jackson said. "MICHIGAN'S economic future really has to be tied up in this creation strategy," he said. "You cant keep jerking around. . .The creation strategy is really a long-term strategy." It takes five to 10 years to see such an economic approach pay off, he added. In the study, Jackson links Michigan's industrial history to creation strategy. Michigan started without industry until the creation of manufacturing industries, agriculture, and the automobile industry, he said. It is only logical and practical that Michigan continue this, according to Jackson. Long-term planning, confidence between the state's business community and state government, and continuity between administrations are the primary factors for Michigan's comeback, Jackson summarized. THE cooperation between a Republican administration and the succeeding Democratic administration is explained by the fact that Milliken was a "very By PHLIP LEVY The three student positions on the LSA Curriculum Committee were filled by LSA Student Government yesterday, according to LSA-SG President Michelle Tear. The names of the appointees will be released Friday after the committee members and the appointees are notified. All of LSA-SG's appointments have now been filled except for one open position on the Michigan Student Assembly. THE curriculum committee is perhaps the most important LSA committee in which student are allowed to participate. It meets every Tuesday and makes recommendations on academic matters to the executive committee, the college's top body. The curriculum committee consists of nine voting faculty members, three voting student members, and a number of non- voting faculty and college administration members. The student representatives have been absent from all four curriculum committee meetings this year because they were not appointed until last night. THE STUDENT government chose to appoint its representatives in the fall, rather than the spring, in order to allow freshmen to participate. Consequently, there was a delay as applications were taken and applicants were interviewed. In the last two weeks the curriculum committee has taken up the issues of course credit hours and the college's foreign language requirement. No actions were taken, but committee members expect an ongoing series of discussions on the topics. According to Prof. Rudi Lindner, -co-chairman of the See CURRICULUM, Page 2 Jackson ... authored study liberal Republican" and factions of the Democratic Party nationally were looking for more competitive entrepreneurship, Jackson said. "Also there is somewhat of a bi- partisan tradition in Michigan," he added. Jackson does not give all the credit for the state's economic recovery to President Reagan, but he does admit that Michigan's comeback is tied to the national economy. "Clearly the national recovery has helped Michigan's economy," Jackson said. The national recovery has allowed the Blanchard Administration to implement the creation strategy, he said. Theater receive By LOUIS STANCATO The Kresge Foundation will present a $150,000 matching grant to the Michigan Theater later this month, following the theater's successful campaign to raise the $1.56 million to qualify for grant. Renovations should be completed by the end of this month, according to Roger Hewett, project director of operations for the theater. The Michigan Theater has been "showing a different film every night," since it opened Sept. 20, Hewett said. THE THEATER was built in 1928 to showcase silent movies. In 1984, the theater embarked on a year-long fund raising drive to raise money to S Kresge grant restore the theatre to its original 1928 appearance and improve mechanical and safety features. Work is also being done refinishing chairs and walls in the auditorium and foyer. Carpet installation, however, will be delayed until the beginning of next year, Hewett said. "The restoration is approximately 85 to 90 percent complete, with most of the remaining work to be completed by the end of October," he said. The theatre received a grant from the Kresge Foundation "based partly on the request, and partly on the amount needed to complete the project," See KRESGE, Page 3 INSIDE 'MARGINAL' LITERATURE: Opinion looks at the life of a member of the '80's countercult- ture. See Page 4. TODAY Senioritis you to check in with your concentration advisor as soon as possible to make sure you're taking the classes you need. The LSA College rec- ommends that seniors file for graduation the term before they plan to graduate because advisors are often booked long before Graduation. And remember: It just wouldn't be and secretaries can work in the restaurants for the day in order to commemmorate the birthday of McDonald's founder, Ray Kroc. They'll be "doing what Ray loved best"-preparing and serving hot hamburgers, wiping tables, serving soft drinks, and sweeping the floors. Al Fellhauer, who owns the McDonald's on 9