Ninety-seven years of editoria/freedom VOLUME XCVII - NO. 74 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14,1987 COPYRIGHT 1987, THE MICHIGAN DAILY New By STEVE BLONDER Apple Computers is expected to announce a new line of Macintosh computers next week and another line next month, but Apple officials say their upcoming Macintosh sale at the University is not an attempt to dump their inventory. Apple officials refused to comment on the new models, but rough descriptions of the machines Regents fate of Old Main By ANDY MILLS The old University Hospitals complex, a landmark at the corner of Observatory and East Ann for 61 years, will gradually be demolished if the Board of Regents authorizes it at its monthly meeting tomorrow. Under the proposal, demolition would begin in the spring. V"THE complex, known as "Old Main," was virtually deserted following the opening of the new hospital last spring. Currently, Old Main houses only the Medical School's radiation oncology unit, which is waiting to move into the Alice Lloyd Memorial Laboratory. The lab is expected to be complete Iby the summer of 1988. Keeping in line with an eight- year-old state-issued Certificate of Need - the document that authorized construction of the new hospital - Old Main houses no patients. The certificate states that the University should demolish the hospital. If kept, the certificate says, it cannot be used for patient care. arVice Provost for Medical Affairs George Zuidema said he doesn't know how much the demolition will cost the University, but said Old Main "is not an efficient building. It costs us $1 million a See OLD, Page 5 Macs expected from Apple can be compiled from campus experts' accounts. The computers, code-named "Alladin" and "Paris," will have larger screens, faster processors, larger memories, built- in hard disk drives, and will be compatible with IBM machines, according to sources. HARD disks have more room for storage than floppy disks, but they must currently be purchased as a separate accessory for the Macintosh Plus. The larger screen will allow people to view an entire page at once, cutting down the time it takes to read a file and providing more space for graphics, according to Chuck Nicholas, a computer consultant in the College of Engineering. Nicholas said with its increased clarity, looking at the larger screen will be "like looking at a photograph." A small screen has been the principal complaint that users have had with the Macintosh Plus, he said. Processors do the actual computing operations in a computer. With the new computers' faster processors, "you won't have to waste time waiting for a file to be printed out and you can do more than one thing at a time," said Nicholas. IBM compatibility would give Macintosh users access to software developed for IBM computers. Phoenix Software Associates of Norwood, Mass. has reportedly developed the technology to link Macintoshes and IBM compatible computers, but company officials were unavailable for comment. For most students, however, the Macintosh Plus will remain adequate. "I think that the main use of computers on campus is word processing, and other kinds of editing. For that task, a Mac Plus does all that one wants and even more," said LSA junior Nick Rose, an, independent software developer for Apple. NICHOLAS, though, said the Macintosh Plus may become obsolete in a couple of years. "Once See APPLE, Page 5 Panel city h de t hears ousing Plan would limit growth offratiernities, sororities By JERRY MARKON The Ann Arbor Planning Commission, after an emotional public hearing, last night debated a controversial proposal to restrict group housing in the North Burns Park area. The commission, as of midnight last night, had not yet voted on the plan, which could cause a major housing crunch for the University's Greek system. Commission members have predicted they will approve the plan, which was proposed by a neighborhood association opposed to future Greek expansion. The plan would change city zoning laws to prohibit "group" housing on 45 lots, though it would not affect 21 existing fraternities, sororities, co-operatives, and non-residential groups. It would still have to be approved by the Ann Arbor City Council before it could be implemented. More than 100 people crowded City Council chambers for the public hearing. Speakers supporting the Greeks emphasized the lack of off-campus student housing, and some attacked the tactics of the neighborhood association. "The University of Michigan has buried its head in the sand and stopped providing for student housing," said David Eastlik, an alumnus of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Eastlik outlined how students - Greek and non-Greek - are being "squeezed out" by high rents and upscale economic development. He acknowledged that some 'fraternities have had "behavior problems," but he attributed them to poor supervision by the University. Betsy French, a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, said North Burns Park residents "envision a town where students are never seen, nor heard - where they just deposit their money." See G'IEEKS, Page 2 Daily photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Aoy AnnA residents Joe Krasny and Robert Donaldson create model ships in the West Bigineering building yestenlay. Students will use these ships in naval architecture lab experiments. Official: tuition plan may work By STEPHEN GREGORY Pending approval from the Internal Revenue Service, Michigan's new tuition-guarantee program could begin operations by the end of the year. But many are already questioning how the program will work, and how it will avoid cost overruns that have plagued similar programs in the past. Under the program, called the Michigan Educational Trust, parents or guardians of a student would give the state $3,000 to $4,000 - either in a lump sum or in installments - in exchange for four years of tuition at any state college or university. The program was once called the Baccalaureate Education System Trust. TO RAISE funds for tuition, the state would invest the money in stocks, bonds, and real estate, financing the program from the revenues, according to State Treasurer Robert Bowman. If the student decides to go to a private or non-Michigan school, the parents would get back the full amount of their investment, along with an as yet undetermined amount of interest. The program would eliminate two of the risks parents face when providing for their children's education - rising tuition and an unpredictable investment market. After the parents pay the initial sum, the state would assume these risks. ONE University official said he thinks the state probably won't have to worry about astronomical tuition rises - at least for now. "The years of skyrocketing tuition increases are over," said Harvey Grotrian, the University's director of financial aid. The IRS is now considering whether it will make the MET payments tax deductible, as the proposal stipulates. If it doesn't, the proposal will come back before the Legislature for further deliberation. Bowman said, however, that he thinks the IRS will approve it. Robert Holbrook, a University administrator who is following the program's developments, said he doesn't think the IRS will approve the program because "it is looking to raise taxes, not lower them." See STATE, Page 3 Grotrian ... could use help with aid Congressman praises King Hotel emploe chbarged in blaze SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - A Dupont Plaza Hotel maintenance worker was arrested yesterday and charged with 96 counts of murder for the New Year's Eve fire at the posh hotel. The suspect, Hector Escudero Aponte, was an employee of the hotel for 10 years and was the first person arrested in the case. But according to charges filed in the U.S. District. Court in this U.S. commonwealth, Escudero Aponte set the fire "in concert with and in agreement with others." JUSTICE SECRETARY Hector Rivera Cruz and Jerry Rudden, chief spokesman for the See OFFICIALS, Page 5 INSIDE Law school administration unfairly sends student newspaper packing. OPINION, PAGE 4 Arts previews Shaw's Candida playing tonight at the Michigan Theatre. ARTS, PAGE 7 Michigan wrestler John Fisher By HAMPTON DELLINGER Rep. William Gray (D-Pa.), an emerging black leader, began a two- day symposium honoring Dr. Martin Luther King last night by reminding a crowd of 500 at Hill Auditorium that the battle led by King has not been won. Gray, chairman of the House Budget Committee, spoke on several issues he believes the slain civil rights leader would be involved with today, including apartheid in South Africa, President Reagan's education funding cuts, and the "decaying values of America." "As long as America keeps silent on apartheid, we are a onsnirator anu due to he indicted." 'The question in 1955 was whether I could go to the University of Mississippi. The question today is whether I could pay the tuition.' -Rep. William Gray (D-Pa.) question today is whether I could pay the tuition," he said. Gray contrasted President Reagan, who has proposed a decrease in spending for higher education, with the civil rights leader, who "understood that education is one of the key ingredients for achieving the American dream." The Budget Chairman was fly those planes?" Gray asked. Like the man he honored, Gray is a Baptist minister, and he pointed to the rise in drug addiction and teenage pregnancy as symptoms of America's loss of faith and decline in values. He said those developments would have deeply disturbed King if he were alive today. "Remember that Martin got his