- __ - -- City housing code may be revised soon The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 13, 1987-Page 3 Groups support Am. Indians at ceremony By STEVE KNOPPER Ann Arbor's 20-year-old housing code, long criticized for its ambig- uity, may be officially revised within the next month. "Hoping to get a good, concise code by Nov. 1 is a bit optimistic," City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw told councilmembers at last night's working session, "but it's something I can get a handle on." A council committee redrafted the current code last year. It was revised last June and again earlier this month. The new version, according to committee chair Kathy Edgren (D- Fifth Ward) "takes away a lot of words like 'sufficient' or 'adequate.' We've tried to remove the gray areas. "This code was written 20 years ago," Edgren said, "and it hasn't be redone... there has been a lot of slipping and sliding since then." The 53-page revised code specifies floor area sizes of bathrooms and kitchens, vent sizes, lengths of reparable cracks, and penalties for violations, among other things. But Ann Arbor resident Leslie Riester said at last night's public hearing that the "lack of leadership at the housing bureau" should be improved before the code is effective. "Without an efficient bureaucracy to enforce the code," she said, "it's just a waste of paper." Ann Arbor Tenant's Union Coordinator Jen Faigel told councilmembers that the housing bureau staff is not well-trained, and that there are only five city building inspectors for more than 26,000 housing units. She added that the new code was a "big improvement" over the old one. Edgren admitted that the housing bureau has some "very serious problems," but said the new code would improve the situation. The new code, she said, would ensure that complaints were handled by the housing bureau instead of through the landlords, and that decisions would be made by the Housing Board of Appeals, not secretly by the department. "We're going to enforce it," Edgren said. "We're going to ticket." By STEPHEN GREGORY Members of local minority-advo- cate groups addressed about 50 people last night in the Diag, attempting to abolish stereotypes of Native Am- ericans and protesting the observance of Columbus Day. Kateri Walker, the president of the Native American Student Assoc- iation, said American Indians have been wrongly cast either as bow and arrow carrying savages or as faithful companions to whites like Tonto, the sidekick of the Lone Ranger. Walker said that while some characterizations of Native American have some historical justification, most are myths perpetutated by tele- vision and fiction. "These are the myths we're here tonight to bury," Walker said. "We're not savages and heathens," Walker said, adding that the French started the practice of scalping and that Indian approachs to nature and religion were admired by 18th cent- ury intellectuals. Kim Smith, a member of the Un- ited Coalition Against Racism, said Columbus Day represents the invas- ion and subjugation of Nativeo American cultures and isn't an ef fective reflection of "a lot of the sen timents in this country." Peggy Novelli, a supporter B ig Mountain Indian tribes in Arizona,, said the United States goverment is currently trying to relocate approx- imately 10,000 to 15,000 Dine from the reservation in order to clear the land for mining. The U.S. government says relocating the Dineh because cannot get along with the Hopi. it is they Daily Photo by ELLEN LEVY Art and baseball Before jumping into his helicopter to watch the Tiger's playoff game, piz- za mogul and Detroit Tigers owner Tom Monagham visits with Ann Arbor resident Sharon Fry at the Michigan Guild of Artists first annual Autumn Arts Festival. Fiancial matters upset faculty group But UCAR member David Fletcher, said the two peoples have often publicized they are not fight-' ing. Novelli encouraged people to help Big Mountain Indian support groups block the relocation. Walker said she finds it ironic tha the University can recruit no more than 100 Native American students in a state that has an Indiau population of 40,000. Walker said local tribes originally granted the land for the University to the state ii a treaty. Hurricane hits Florida MIAMI (AP) - Hurricane Floyd sprang to life in the Gulf of Mexico early yesterday, taking aim on south Florida with 80 mph wind and heavy rain. Some coastal residents scurried for shelter, while others cleared stores of batteries, canned food, and bottled water. Floyd grew from a tropical storm to become the season's third hur- ricane at 8 a.m. and began heading up through the Florida Keys toward southern Dade County at the south- em tip of the mainland, spawning at least two tornadoes. "It's not a strong hurricane," said National Hurricane Center Director Bob Sheets. "We don't expect it to get much worse." He said Floyd would maintain its strength as it passed just south of Miami during the evening and then would head out to sea. The center posted hurricane warn- ings around Florida's southern penin- sula from Stuart north of West Palm Beach on the condominium-studded east coast to Venice north of Fort Myers on the Gulf coast, roughly the area from Lake Okechobee south. METN markets tapes to 4 TH IST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Peiformances U-M Symphony Orchestra - Hill Auditorium,n8 p.m. (7634726). Gustav Meier leads the University Symphony Orchestra in their first concert of the season. Bryan Bowers - The Ark, 8 p.m. (761-1451). Bowers, widely regarded as the leading virtuoso on the autoharp, also has distinct gifts as a singer and songwriter. Speakers Robert Kelly - Reading from his work, U-M Visiting Writers Series, 4p.m. Rackham East Conference. Lawrence Lee - "Inside Paraguay," Ecumenical Campus Center, The International Center, noon, 603 E. Madison. Prof. Peter Michelson - "English Literature as Reflected in German Literature of the Eighteenth Century," Dept. of Germanic Lang. and Literatures, 4:30 p.m., Rackham West Conference Rm. Dr. Susan Langdon - "Casting the Homeric Pantheon," Kelsey Museum of Archeology, 4 p.m., 2009 Angell Hall. David North - "The Origins of Bolshevism," U-M Branch of Young Socialists, 7 p.m., 2435 Mason Hall. Tim Joslyn - "'Exploring the Andes and the Amazon," Bivouac Adventure Travel, 8 p.m., 336 South State. Meetings Startracks - Pizzeria Unos, downstairs. 9:30 pm. Baha'i Club - 6 p.m., Mich. League Room B. Hebrew Speaking Club - 5 p.m., 206 Angell Hall. TARDAA - 8-11 p.m., 296 Dennison. C .t * ,.. V ... '.1 C n Remedy," First Church of Christ Scientist, 8 p.m., 1833 Washtenaw Ave. Baha'i Club - Introductory Discussion on the Teachings of the Baha'i Faith, 7:30 p.m., Mich. League, Room D (662-8362). Dow Chemical - Pre-interview' 4-6 p.m., 1500 EECS (763-5027). Wilderness State Park/Mackinaw Island Trip - Pre-trip meeting, 7 p.m., NCRB Conference Room (764-3967). Marxism: Not Just a Dream - Presented by SPARK, a revolutionary Communist Organization, 7 p.m., 116 MLB (747-9743). Rally in Solidarity with South African Political Prisoners - Free South Africa Coordinating Comm., noon, The Diag (663-4118). Career Planning and Placement - The Law School Personal Essay, 4:10-5 p.m. CP&P; Investigating Organizations and Employers, 4:10- 5:30 p.m. CP & P; Resume Writing Lecture, 4:10-5:30 p.m., School of Education; Employer Pres.- Procter & Gambler Co., 6-8 p.m., Michigan Union-Anderson C & D (764-7460). Zoe Olefsky - Representative of Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem, on campus to meet with students interested in various programs, 7:30 - 8:30 p.m., Michigan Rm., Michigan Union (663-3336). Campus Cinema The Murder of Fred Hampton; 7 p.m., 8:30, 10 p.m. MLB 3, free. The story of the Black Panther leader murdered in Dec., 1969 by the Chicago Police. No Vietnamese Ever Called Me Nigger; 7 p.m., 8:30, 10 p.m., MLB 3, free. Filmed at the Harlem fall mobilization where people are interviewed about racism in the Vietnam War. By EVE BECKER Members of the Committee on the Economic Status of the Faculty (CESF) are unhappy with t h e University administration's response to their proposals on faculty salaries and benefits. Public Health Prof. and former CESF chair Eugene Feingold told the faculty Senate Assembly yesterday that many of the committee's rec- ommendations have not been acted on by the administration. "(The administration is) always willing to listen, but not always willing to act on what they hear," Feingold said. The committee will express its concerns to the Board of Regents at its meeting Friday morning. "Is the outcome of CESF worth the time and the substantial effort that the members put into it?" he asked. "It's not very encouraging... I'm left somewhat ambivalent," Feingold said. He said traditional salary reviews between the University and its peer institutions are increasingly inade- quate because faculty salaries are falling across a wider range. CESF continues to look for alternate meth- ods of conducting salary reviews, he said. Feingold said the administration's response to the rising faculty burden of health care costs is also inade- quate. For the past year, the increase in health insurance premiums was shared equally by the University and its employees. CESF strongly op- poses this policy. The regents approved a one-year increase for last year, and have ex- tended the increase to include this year. The faculty fear this increase will become a set policy, increasing their health care costs. "It behooves the University to look at the reasons for the increase in costs, instead of shifting it onto the faculty," Feingold said. Current CESF chair and Social Work Prof. Jesse Gordon said the health care cost-sharing increase re- sults in a salary reduction for faculty. He made a presentation to the regents which he said was "as vigorous a case as I could, and it didn't get any- where." The CESF report also said it is looking for more "socially responsi- ble" ways to invest the faculty's re- tirement contributions than current funds. Gordon said the group has for- warded a request to the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) that Fidelity Investments and the Calvert Social Investment Fund be added as "socially responsible" funds for part of the basic investment plan. The administration has also been resistant to approve a supplementa- tion of retirement benefits for faculty retired between 1956 and 1966, Feingold reported. industry, records classes (Continued from Page 1) site taping capability, MEIN is able to put more on tape than just conversation. The production staff of the network can add scripting, com- puter graphics, sets, and music to enhance the final product. Revenue generated from video tapings account for about 35 percent of the network's income. Video prices vary depending on size and so- phistication. The average price of buying a tape is $390 per hour of final product and renting is about $165. METN also uses its video taping capability to aid the College of Engineering directly. Engineering 103, Digital Computing, is a re- quired course that approximately 400 students take each year, according to the College of Engineering counsel- ing office. The course uses video taped in- struction with student participation on IBM personal computers. METN produces the video tapes of the classes' professors. Digital Computing is intended to familiarize students with comput- ers and teach organization and capa- bility of digital computers. "(The course) originally started off with the basics of FORTRAN programming, but the students com- ing in now are much more advanced in computers, and the course has changed," said Dwight Stevenson, the director of the network. Engineering 103 students work in three classrooms located next o the METN complex in the Dofv building and are equipped with a video monitor and a computer station for each student. The final aspect of METN is Video Information Network Engineering. VINE, which is still in the development stages, is a four channel system which will be able to distribute video information any- where in the College of Engineering. "We're moving into a time when information dissemination is a prob- lem that technology can help us with," said Stevenson. The system will have video units set up through out North Campus in buildings, classrooms, and offices. Currently, one prototype is set up in the atrium of the Electrical Engineering Computer Science building and 19 more are ready for distribution. All of these video units were obtained on an equipment grant from General Electric while the cables used for the system are from the old Apollo Domain Network which run between the engineering buildings. METN's part in VINE lies in obtaining more monitors and equip- ment for the system and for the dis- tribution of information. POLICE NOTES J Break-ins The Ann Arbor Police Depart- ment is investigating several week- end break-ins, according to Sgt. Jan Minorites increase (Continued from Page 1) Wilson met with top University administrators yesterday to discuss the handbook. Among the officials were Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost James Duder- stadt, Vice Provost for Minority Af- fairs Charles Moody, and President Harold Shapiro. Moody said the administration will follow the manual's recom- mendations. He also said the book may dicuss programs similar to ones the Uni- versity may already have in use, like the Martin Luther King/Ceasar Chavez/Rosa Parks initiative to introduce the University to potential Suomala. An intruder entered a building in the 600 block of Hill Street by forcing a window and stole a tape deck and set of keys, valued at $125. A screen was removed from a building in the 1000 block o f Highland, and a suspect stole a stereo system and videocassette re- corder worth approximately $1700. Also, an intruder entered a building in the 1400 block of Washington Heights through a broken window and stole a videocassette recorder valued at $300. by Steve Blonder UM News in The Daily 764-0552 tI(GRP-CS d CC)QiNG P WNG 8:ND)ING E FORMS I alphagraphios riantshops Of The Future I I i Let's Get Acquainted! I OTEN Stop by and see a Jostens representative, Wednesday. October 14-Friday, October 16, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.,