Page 2 - The Michigan Daily-- Friday, March 6, 1987 'U', MS1 By EDWARD KLEINE Special to the Daily LANSING - Cascading win - dows of water, sidewalk cafes, and a x riverfront theater are just a few of the things University of Michigan and Michigan State University students have in mind for the future of the state capital. The ideas came out of a project between the two schools and the Capital Park Subcommittee of the Capital Revitalization Task Force, a state agency. Architecture and landscape archi - tecture students were asked to look at the subcommittee's plans for renovating downtown Lansing and ; building a state park around the " Capitol. They were also asked to J plan Capitol renewal come up with proposals for the area, said University Landscape Architecture Prof. Kenneth Polakowski, who taught the four- week mini-course which produced the plans. The way the students drew up their plans was unique - MSU and University students students were matched together. Cooperation, not competition, was the order in this meeting of the two schools. Current plans for a Michigan Capitol Park include a Welcome Center, a Michigan Library and Museum, and an Environmental Center featuring an Aquarium, a 360-degree theater, and an Ice Age Simulation Dome. Polakowski and MSU Landscape b - A WE WORK AS LATE AsYOU DO k kinkos S-- Whenever you need clear. quality copies, come to Kinko's. Were open early. open late, and open weekends. When you're working late. it's good to know you're not working alone kinkoIs Great copies.Great people. OPEN 24 HOURS OPEN EARLY OPEN LATE 540 E. Liberty 1220 S. University Across From Mich Theater Across From Village Corners 761-4539 747-9070 o yinoingmoweinonwomo omomtomomomon East Quadrangle and! The Campus Coalition for Women Request the Honor of Your Presencev at the 20th Annual Women's Weekend "CELEBRATION OF INTERNATIONAL WOMEN" I MARCH 5 -8, 1987 EAST QUADRANGLE University of Michigan Sponsored by: WQBN and East Quad Representative Assemblies,a RHA, MSA, and CEW EVENTS FRIDAY, MARCH 6 Keynote Address and Discussion ...................... 8 pm,Auditorium* * Dr. Mercedes P. Briceno, Assistant Secretary General, UN "Third World Women and Social Change" ,y SUNDAY, MARCH 7a Art EYCibit H ...............................12-6 pm, Room 124 Panel Discussion .....................................2 pm, Room 126 " '"International Women Students" Jane Thorson, Lecturer, Residential College . .. . ... . .. .. 7 pm, Room 126 "History of Gender Roles: an international perspective" Films: "Women in a Changing World"...... . .........9 pm, Room 126 Films: "South Africa Belongs to Us"° Or "Double Day"a SUNDAY, MARCH 8' U Coffee House............................1-4 pm, Half Way Inn creative expression, readings and refreshments Closing Address and Discussion..................4 pm, Auditorium Moderator: Dr. Elizabeth Douvan, Director, Residential College Sohair Soukkary, Deputy Chief, UN Development Fund *A11 events to be held in East Quadrangle '" O4E.O..4h..()p.0 4EEp.04E hEh1o.04~hrOh~.04II EmEh1.04hEN4E.O.UmE-in .OEpg "S4' p £r 4' : L L SF a 3' r' y udaMrh ,3% r d Architecture Prof. Tony Bauer, who are both on the subcommittee, came up with the idea of getting student input last summer. POLAKOWSKI said students often get to try their hands at real- life design situations. "We use the talents of the students to try to influence reality," he said, adding that similar projects have been done in Muskegon, St. Clair, Cheboygan, and Monroe. The teams presented their drawings to city and state officials on Feb. 19. Hector Chiunti, who directs the subcommittee, was impressed with the work he saw there, and said he expects it to be incorporated in the final plan. Polakowski said that this was Eeui$oun #'eru I*,J 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. Wednesdays: 5:30 Supper (free) and Fellowship. CENTER OPEN EACH DAY for information call663-9376 ROBERT B. WALLACE, PASTOR FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave.- 662-4466 (between Hill and S. University St.) William Hillegonds, Senior Minister Sunday Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00a.m. UNIVERSITY MINISTRY J. B. Notkin, University Minister University Seminar: Galations 11:00 a.m., French Room. Read and Use Daily Classifieds the first time the University and MSU landcape architecture depart - ments have worked together on a project. Landscape architecture graduate student David Torgoff said he and other students tried to highlight Grand River and encourage people to spend time in the area. The students proposed a lot of trees and a riverside plaza. Law prof. hospitalized By ANDY MILLS Law Prof. Emeritus William Bishop was rushed to the hospital yesterday morning and was listed in serious condition, although the reason for his hospitalization is unknown. Business student Gerard An - derson helped Bishop into the Monroe Street entrance to the Legal Research building. Test results on Bishop's condition will be available today. Bishop's daughter, Elizabeth, said last night that her father is doing well, although he will remain in intensive care for 24 hours. Elizabeth Brown, a retired research associate at the Law School, said yesterday afternoon that there is no cause for immediate concern. Brown is coordinating information about the incident. Before retiring and becoming a professor emeritus in 1976, Bishop, 80, had been on the University's law faculty since 1949. In 1981, he completed a term as one of four U.S. members of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, a group whose members can be called upon to arbitrate international disputes. Bishop is still on the editorial board of the American Journal of International Law, of which he was Editor-in-Chief for 10 years. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Plane crash probe begins ROMULUS, Mich. - Investigators from the National Trans - portation Safety Board yesterday began examining the wreckage of the commuter aircraft that crashed Wednesday at the Detroit Metropolitan Airport killing nine, at the start of a week-long field investigation. The agency's conclusions regarding the cause of the crash likely will not be ready for nine months, said Mike Benson, NTSB spokesman. "We will remove the wreckage when we feel comfortable enough that we have factual information on the crash," Benson said. "Our heavy focus is to reconstruct the final minutes of the flight." Benson said the airplane was not required to carry a black box,: a device that records cockpit conversations and the status of the plane's controls. Meese bolsters Walsh's status WASHINGTON - Attorney General Edwin Meese said yesterday h is appointing Lawrence Walsh to head a new office of independent counsel as "an insurance policy" against legal challenges by Lt. Col. Oliver North that threatened to torpedo Walsh's investigation into the Iran-Contra affair. In doing so, Meese linked the independent counsel more closely to the executive branch of government, a result which Congress sought to avoid in enacting the 1978 Ethics in Government Act under which Walsh was appointed. Walsh, however, endorsed the new arrangement. In a statement, Meese said that a lawsuit filed by North, raising constitutional questions about the 1978 law, "places a question mark. over ...Walsh's activities... by creating a parallel position securing to Judge Walsh the powers, authority and independence that the Ethics in Government Act provides, we remove that question mark." Senate passes income tax cut LANSING - The state Senate agreed yesterday to slice the state income tax rate from 4.6 percent to 4.4 percent and promised to make sure Michigan's blind and low-income elderly don't end up with bigger tax bills. Approval of the rollback on a 34-2 vote came after three days of squabbling over the fairness of the proposal. "The unemployed in this state, the senior citizens and the blind will not be losers under the income tax rollback," promised Sen. John Cherry, D-Clio. The two freshman senators, backed by fellow Democrats, set up a series of procedural roadblocks which postponed a vote and led majority Republicans to strike an agreement pledging to restore some special tax breaks. The exemptions and credits for the unemployed, elderly and blind otherwise will be eliminated. NATO briefed on arms deal BRUSSELS, Belgium - The chief U.S. arms negotiator gave the NATO allies an upbeat assessment yesterday of prospects for a superpower agreement to scrap medium-range nuclear missiles in' Europe, sources said. Max Kampelman and the two other delegates to the U.S.-Soviet arms talks in Geneva, Maynard Gliman and Ron Lehman, briefed the 16 ~ NATO ambassadors at a closed-door, two-hour meeting before flying to consultations in Washington. The Geneva negotiations got new life last weekend when Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev announced willingness to sign a treaty on medium-range missiles separately from a package accord covering long- range missiles and Star Wars, the U.S. plan for a space-based defense system EXTRAS A Little secession problem One of halls in Mary Markley is threatening to secede from another hall. It's about taxation without representation - sort of. First Little, currently under the rule of the Little House Council, paid $775 in hall dues, according to First Little resident Steve Mebius, an LSA freshman. But most of the Little House Council officers come from Second Little. Those officers spent $500 of the money on weekly movies, said Mebius. But they neglected to tell First Little about them. Furious, the First Little hall circulated a petition to secede from Little House, and form their own house. If they secede, First Little wants to either split the remaining funds with Second Little, or have all of its funds returned. "We got a bad deal because they spent all our money," said Steve Leppard, First Little resident and engineering freshman. "It would be great if we could get it all back."e LSA freshman Rhonda Kohnstamm, president of the Little House Council and Second Little resident, would not comment. The vote to secede was scheduled for late last night. LSAT GMAT GRE MCAT Preparation Courses Evening and weekend classes. Guarantee: Score in the top 25% or take the next course free. (215) 557-6989 1-800-628-3232 The National Center for Educational Testing Since 1978 NationalCenter WHITE MARKET CALIFORNIA NAVEL ORANGES 88 size 4 for 990 illiam Hours: M-F 8-7 Sat. 8-6 609 E W 663-4253 If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. -Rebecca Cod UXr fictiigan Bailg Vol. XCVII-- No. 106 .1 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and sub- scribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate., I Editor in Chief.............................ROB EARLE Managing Editor.............AMY MINDELL News Editor..............................PHILIP I. 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