--n 'U'gives $1 mill. for Ford fund By ROSE MARY WUMMEL President Harold Shapiro an- nounced last Thursday that the University will name a $1 million endowment for a professorship or fellowship in honor of ex-President Gerald Ford, honorary chair of the Campaign for Michigan fundraising drive. The Campaign for Michigan has raised over $175 million for endowments and facilities since the campaign was launched on October 24, 1983. Campaign leaders expect the fund to reach $180 million by the end of the month when the Campaign is officially complete. The original goal was $160 million. Shapiro made the surprise an- nouncement of the dedication to Ford at a news conference to cele- brate the success of the Campaign last week. "The whole idea was to surprise Ford pleasantly," said Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline). Ford expressed his gratitude at the unexpected announcement. "I don't know if President Ford ever imagined when he was a student here that he would play as important a role in the history of this insti- tution as he has during the Cam- paign," Shapiro said in a press release last week.rFordearned a Ibachelor's degree from the University in 1935. "Ford really did much more than I would expect for an honorary (chair). He played a very important and vital role in soliciting gifts and soliciting volunteer leadership," said Roach. Roach joined the Campaign as one of over 1,000 volunteer leaders nationwide after Ford sent him a letter inviting him to join,, the group. The moneyfor the endowment will come from donations that were not designated for any specific purpose. Shapiro decided to name the endowment in honor of Ford and informally discussed the idea with regents prior to surprising Ford with } the announcement last Thursday. The regents will officially approve the endowment at the formal regents meeting in December or January. Ford will decide soon whether the endowment will be used to fund a faculty or a student fellowship. The Micligan Daily-Thursday, December 10, 1987- Page 3 State Senate bill threatens to kill city rent control Daily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN Christmas preparations Ypsilanti resident Tim Schoen prepares to sell Christmas trees at Frank's Nursery and Crafts on Washtenaw Avenue. Ann Arbor firm wins contract to conduct education research By ALYSSA LUSTIGMAN A state bill designed to deactivate local rent control measures faces a vote today before the Michigan Senate. Senate aides expect little opposition to the bill. The measure, proposed by Sen. Richard Fessler (R-W. Bloomfield) would prevent local government from passing any legislation that would limit the power of property owners to set rent levels. An ammendment to the bill would elminate any existing local legislation regulating rent. Accord- ing to Rick Simonson, admin- istrative assistant to Fessler, there are no such ordinances at the present time in Michigan. The bill went through its third and final reading yesterday afternoon at the Michigan Senate. IF THE BILL passcs the Senate, it will be assigned by House Speaker Gary Owens (D- Ypsilanti) to one of several House committees. The fate of the bill may rest on the which committee receives it. Owens was unavailable for comment. Members of the pro-rent control organization Ann Arbor Citizens' for Fair Rent are hoping that the bill will be assigned to the Judiciary Committee, chaired by Ann Arbor Rep. Perry Bullard. The Judiciary Committee' handles inexact jurisdiction, and has dealt with some landlord/tenant acts in the past. "We are not especially warm to the bill," said Brett McRae, aide to the local Democrat. "It forbids local units of government from enacting any legislation on a local level that would control rent, and the only way rent control could pass is at a state level. The chances of that are nill to zero." MCRAE ADDED that Bullard disagreed with the bill on the grounds that housing is a local issue, and should be decided upon by "those who know the ins and outs of the problems," and because "the very threat of rent stabilization is a good tool to use for negotiations between land owners and residents." Fair Rent group member Michael Appel, an attorney with Student Legal Services, said the passage of the bill "would end (the local) campaign for rent control." He added that if property owners are powerful enough to kill rent control in the state legislature, they can stop any pro-tenant legislation. The Fair Rent group has proposed a city ordinance for rent stabili- zation, which would limit rent increases to 75 percent of the inflation rate, and a maximum 15 percent increase each year. The group also proposes the establishment of a five member Rent Stabilization Board, appointed by City Council, to review and approve all proposed rent increases. Rent stabilization is currently used in Boston, New York, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C. SIMONSON said the issue first came to the attention of Sen. Fessler in Oakland County, where residents were concerned about' the establishment of different policies in the various municipalities. "There was concern that a quiltwork of laws would be enacted," he said, and residents did not want state legislation to override already enforced ordinances. By JOON KANG The U.S. Department of Educa- tion awarded a $248,000 contract last month to the Ann Arbor-based In- dustrial Technologies Institute (ITI) to study a sample of vocational edu- cation programs. The one-year contract was given by the Department of Education's office for National Assessment of Vocational Education as part of a congressionally mandated study. The study will sample post-sec- ondary institutions with vocational programs lasting from six months to two years, including community colleges, proprietary schools, and technical institutes. "We want to evaluate the effec- tiveness of post-secondary vocational education programs throughout the country," said Rocco DePietro, se- nior researcher in ITI's Center for Social and Economic Issues and project director for the study. "What constitutes an effective program? That's what we're looking at." Study findings could affect Fed- eral funding through the Carl Perkins Vocational Education Act of 1984, which aids the vocational programs in the country. The Act is up for a review next year. "Congress called for a study of vocational education for purposes of evaluating the Perkins Act," said John Wirt, director of the U.S. De- partment of Education's office for National Assessment of Vocational Education. He said Congress has planned to evaluate the effective vo- cational programs to pick out the best qualities. The data will be com- piled and shared with the rest of the programs in the country. ITI chose schools with vocational programs from Seattle, San Fran- cisco, Dallas/Ft. Worth, St. Louis, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Atlanta for the study. "We picked eight metropolitan areas where the manufacturing re- gions were changing rapidly, either in a positive or negative way," said DePietro. Detroit will serve as a proving ground for various methods to be used at the test sites. Data will be collected from in- depth interviews with program ad- ministrators, instructors, students, .professional associations, policy- makers, and employers. "Usually the factors involved in effective pro- grams are determined by the quality of teaching, heads of program, and faculty/student relationships," said DePietro. His hypothesis is that ef- fective programs have leaders who relate well not only students, but to employers and legislators as well. Officials at the Department of Education said DePietro's hypothesis helped to get ITI the contract. In ad- dition, ITI's technical background and ability to compare programs were "just the sort of qualities re- quired for this project," said David Goodwin, program officer in the of- fice for National Assessment of Vo- cational Education. The $248,000 will cover the cost of a five member research team for one year. The team will be at each test site for about one week. The team will produce a report for the Department of Education, which in turn will submit the findings as part of a larger report to Congress in 1988. r Me faces pre-trial hearing in January (ConUnued from Page 1) against Pifer and Barbour as "really absurd." Judge P.G.V. Thomassen of the 15th District Court informed Marcuse that the charges carry a maximum penalty of 90 days in jail and/or a $100 fine. Marcuse will remain free on his own recognizance until the trial date. The assembly pledged $1,000 to help Marcuse if he decides to press charges against the Ann Arbor. Police for brutality. The assembly also mimicked an offer by the- Rackham Student Government, Committee supports Cit' (Continued from Page 1) people are going to be there and they may want to go into City Hall," said committee member Ann Attarian. Besides recommending an addition to City Hall, the draft report advocates that the city renovate the existing City Hall. Vice chair Leah Gunn suggested that the report encourage the city to address the question of whether to remove asbestos from the current structure as part of this renovation. Though the draft report recommended that City Council put a bond issue on the April city ballot to fund the expansion, committee members are divided on this question. Many city employees have criticized the current City Hall, built in 1963, as too small to meet the city's present needs. A previous attempt to expand City Hall through a bond initiative was rejected by voters in last April's city election. The draft report reviewed by the committee yesterday says, "the committee was overwhelmed with y Hall park the overcrowding and need for space" in City Hall. The amount of money required to fund the proposed expansion is stillt up in the air. Committee member Tom Fegan said a city officials'1 estimate of $22 million may be incorrect because there is no final (r plan on which to base costs. M E Burnham Associates Drastic Rent Reductions No Added Fees Low Security Deposits & CEN TER FOR W STERN EUROPEAN STUDIES Interested in studying in Florence next term? There are several openings for the Winter term of the Michigan - Wisconsin Florence Program due to late cancellations. Earn in-residence credit by taking a variety of courses, all taught in English. Further information and applications are available at the Center for Western European Studies. The Center for Western European Studies 5208 An gell Hall 8:00-12:301:30-5:00 THE IST Wkat's happening in Ann Arbor today Speakers Danny Levitas - Research Director, Prairiefire Rural Action,. Inc., Des Moines, Iowa. Former' graduate of the Environmental Advocacy Program, "The Current Farm Crisis in Iowa." Bert Schierbeek - Will read from his new book, " C r o s s Roads," 8 p.m., International Center, 603 E. Madison. Call 764- 5370 or 994-9276. Admission is free. Xian-qian Shi - "TBA," 4:00 p.m., Rm. 1200 Chem. Bldg. Meetings Furthermore SAFEWALK - Night-time safety walking service, open seven days a week: 8:00 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. Stop by Rm. 102 Undergraduate Library, Sun.-Thurs. or CIC desk in the Michigan Union, Fri.-Sat., or call 935-1000. InterVarsity C h r i s t i a n Fellowship - Christmas Caroling on the Diag, 7:00 p.m. Call 764-9782 for more info. Detroit Center for Performing Arts - Auditions for "Keep Moving." By appointment only. Call 961-7925 or 925-7138. Chris & Bill Barton Christ.s/ H, n n u . h. WONDERFUL {OLIDAM GlFT 13EA-UTIFUL 1B0XL >yEl10, ,, s ' I'M COUSIN NUTRI ALMEE, the HEALTH NUT j Golden Gem Almonds BUY DIRECT from grower processor - NATURAL, SHELLED ALMONDS - HUGE size U.S. Extra #1. p VALUABLE COUPON ' t I A I