Page 2-The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 3, 1987 State residents By MELISSA RAMSDELL Michigan residents support the construction of the Superconducting Super Collider in Michigan, according to a study by the University's Institute for Social Research. * Community support, in addition to geological and economic factors, is one of the criteria being considered by the federal government in selecting a site. " "Federal officials are very leary of attempting to begin major construction projects where the local community is very resistant. The laical support may well be an important consideration in picking the winner," said John Mogk, head of the team of experts chosen to draft Michigan's Super Collider proposal. He said community protests would reflect badly on the federal government and could create problems for future large-scale projects like the Super Collider. ISR researcher Micheal Traugott, co- author of the study, said a site in New York has already bee n eliminated from the competition due tq lack of local support. The Super Collider propels atomic particles around a 53-mile kIng underground ring at speeds approaching that of light. Th e accelerator smashes the particles tqgether at certain points along the ring to break them into smaller components. This will enable scientists to examine whether components of atoms exist at sizes smfaller than previously discovered and how they behave. The Reagan Adminstration provided $4 billion for the project and it will be the largest research facility of its type in the world. Last March, Governor James Blanchard submitted Michigan's two proposed sites - at Dundee between Monroe and Lenawee counties in South- eastern Michigan and Stockbridge, between Ann Arbor and Lansing - to the U.S. Department of Energy. The Federal Government will announce its choice in December, 1988. Mogk said Michigan's chances of being chosen to host the facility are better than five to one. The ISR's study concentrated on three areas: the sentiments of residents of the two sites about having the Super Collider constructed near their homes; the statewide response of Michigan citizens to the project; and possible methods for more detailed study of the project's social and environmental effects. The study found residents of both Dundee and Stockbridge receptive to the construction of the Super Collider in their area. Local people were in favor of the economic benefits of such a large project and the world attention which villagers said would "put our town on the map." The research facility would attract scholars and tourists from many different countries as well as support construction workers who will live near the site stimulating new demands for hotels, bars, restaurants and other businesses. Once in operation, the Super Collider facility will employ 3,000 people, 20 percent of whom will be scientists conducting research at several above-ground campus buildiigs located around the ring, again creating a significant economic impact on local towns. Some local townspeople voiced concerns about the relocation of farmers and the large influx of people to the area. As a result of digging the 100 foot deep tunnel, buildings, homes and farmlands will be torn down and moved from the 5,000 acre site area. Traugott said 1.6 million people live within an hour of the site. Two hundred families and fewer than 10 businesses would be affected, Traugott said. Farmers cultivating land within the site would be relocated to other lands and compensated by the state for thier losses. After the construction is finished, the land will be returned to the farmers. Farmland located on sections of the site that will be permanently occupied by the research campus buildings willtbe bought from the farmers by the Department of Energy, co-author of the social impact study Richard Stoffle said. Farmers in Dundee said to ISR researchers that the digging of the Super Collider's tunnel would disrupt the elaborate drainage systemsaand turn the site into swampland. Additional soil problems could result from the heavy construction machinery causing the soil to compact and alter the growth of crops. As a result of these findings, the state changed its proposal to use a different method for digging the Super Collider's ring by tunneling underneath the surface rather than digging a trench and refilling it with dirt. The change would effectively avoid drainage problems. Traugott added that the state administration will continue to be responsive to community concerns throughout the process. and will include local people in the decision making process. The study showed that local townspeople also expressed fear about the behavior of construction crews and did not want the construction camps too close to their children. Area administrators said they would respond to increased security needs by hiring larger police and ambulance forces. Additional concerns were raised in both sites about possible noise pollution and harmful side-effects from any radiation the Super Collider might generate. However, the facility would be far enough underground to prevent any such accidents, Stoffle said. Stoffle said that if Michigan is chosen next December, the ISR team will continue to address community concerns and devise solutions to problems raised by the local governments and businesses in response to the project. Traugott said the state is interested in establishing. a "good neighbor policy" with local citizens. collider IN BRIEF the United States. Construction of the Collider will take at least years and will involve Super seven 2,500 BE A LEADER!. .--~ ~ ~2~~1CIT TXXt e''?f 1 T I MX Y~ TT A T.,YIV.. Ten-term TA limit may prompt battle in court '. . - I MUNJVIL IRM 'I11 1II A1'I 1988 f -' The Office of Orientation is now accepting applications for full- time paid summer employment including room and board. Application deadline extended to Friday, Nov. 6,1987; bring to 3000 Michigan Union. For further information please call 764-6290. ANAFFIRMATIVE ACTION NON-DISCRIMINATORY EMPLOYER (Continued from Page 1) The agreement the University and the GEO reached following a strike threat last spring left TAs in a better financial position than ever before, according to John D'Arms, Dean of the Graduate School. Other forms of aid are preferable to TAships, said D'Arms, but sources of nonteaching funding have not improved. Economics Chair Richard Porter, said the limit, "might hurt our ability to teach 201 and 202 sections. We need every TA in good standing." Though the GEO agrees that teaching assistantships are not the best means of financial aid, they contend that the rule should not be implemented until nonteaching funding is available. Demetriades said, "How are departments going to get a Ph.D. student out in five years without giving students nonteaching financial support? Who is going to come up with the money?" If the GEO decides to sue the University they must file the suit before Dec. 25. The first step the GEO will take if they decide not to file a suit is to form a fact-finding alliance with Rackham Student Government to build a case against the "blind implementation of the rule," said Demetriades. Compiled from Associated Press reports China names new premier BEIJING - Premier Zhao Ziyang took over as chief of the Commu- nist Party yesterday in a major leadership reshuffle that brought younger, reform-minded pragmatists to power in China. The new line-up is the result of Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping's plan to replace an aging party leadership with new officials willing to continue his market-oriented reforms and open-door policy. Deng stepped down from three top party posts Sunday at the conclu- sion of the 13th Communist Party Congress, but he was reappointed chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission, ensuring that he will play a major role in China's political futute. Gorbachev calls for restraint in drive to modernize Soviet Union MOSCOW - Mikhail Gorbachev accused his Kremlin critics yester- day of being either too timid or too impatient about the pace of reform, and advised "revolutionary self-restraint" in the drive to modernize the Soviet Union. The Soviet leader said Josef Stalin committed "enormous and unfor- givable" crimes and announced resumption of a campaign to rehabilitate the dictator's victims. He also praised the communist state's second leader, however, for collectivizing agriculture and industrializing the country. Gorbachev's nationally televised speech, which lasted two hours and 41 minutes, was part of the 70th anniversary observance of the 1917 re- volution that brought the comunists to power. Gorbachev's programs aim at improving the quliaty of life by stream- lining bureaucracy. Direct talks with Nicaragua can bring peace, official says DETROIT - The United States could help a Central American peace plan succeed by negotiating directly with Nicaragua's government, former ambassador Sol Linowitz said yesterday. Secretary of State George Schultz has said talks with the Sandinista government could occur when the time is right, said Linowitz, co-chair- man of Inter-American Dialogue, a group of North American and Central American leaders. Thursday marks the scheduled implementation of the main provisions of the peace plan drafted by President Oscar Arias of Costa Rica and sig- ned in August by Arias and the presidents of Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. The plan set a 90-day deadline, ending Thursday, for ceasefires. Black infant death rate rises LANSING - Michigan's high infant mortality rate continued un- changed in 1986, although the rate among blacks worsened when com- pared to the death rate of white babies, the state health director said yes- terday. "The gap between black and white infant deaths is a tragedy - an in- dictment against our society," said Gloria Smith, who is leavng Jan. 1 to head Wayne State University's college of nursing. According to the Department of Public Health, Michigan's infant mortality rate for 1986 remained at 11.4 deaths per 1000 live births, the same as for 1985. The white infant mortality rate decreased from 9.3 deaths per1000 live deaths to 9 deaths, reaching the U.S. Surgeon General's goal. But the black infant mortality rate rose from 22.5 deaths per 1000 births to 23 deaths. EXTRAS Jet grounded for lack of funds PHILADELPHIA - The Franklin Institute science museum says lots of people would take its offer of a free Boeing 707 if it weren't for one little catch. The 70-ton aircraft must be towed away, and the towing fee would likely reach $250,000, officials said. The jet exhibit must be moved by January, when the museum will begin constructing a $41 million addition on the grounds where the plane is parked. The grounds closed Sunday. The 152-foot-long jet flew 51,175 hours and once carried Queen Elizabeth II before British Airways gave it to the museum in 1975. "Everyone says they would love to have the airplane, but nobody has been able to come up with the money to move it," said John McDevitt, the institute's director of operations. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. Vol. XCVIII-- No. 39 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$25 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term: $13 in Ann Arbor; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to the Los Angeles Times Syndicate and the National Student News Ser- vice. Think there's no place in business for someone with a beral arts degree... Think again. Look into careers in Communications Management. A Master's from The Annenberg School of Communications, combined with your bachelor's degree, can open the right doors. Some examples... Suzanne B., B.A. French, U.C., Berkeley. Annenberg M.A. Vice President, Programming Sales, ABC Radio Steve B., B.A. Fine Arts, Ohio University. Annenberg M.A. Senior Vice President, Creative Affairs, Columbia Pictures-TV Paul D., B.A. English, U. Michigan. Annenberg M.A. Manager, Marketing and Public Policy, Pacific Bell Sara K., B.A. Political Science, Duke. Annenberg M.A. Director, Creative Services, Assoc. of TV Programming Executives Pam R., B.A. Asian Studies, Mount Holyoke. Annenberg M.A. Director, Public Relations, St. Paul Medical Center Karl K., B.A. Economics, USC. Annenberg M.A. Senior Management Consultant, Price Waterhouse Wendell F., B.A. Radio/TV/Film, Northwestern. Annenberg M.A. Senior Analyst, Research, Walt Disney Co. Roger A., B.A. Political Science, U.C., Berkeley. Annenberg M.A. Manager, Telecommunication, Computer Sciences Corp. q I If you are interested in gettir munication - and want to g degree*... Talk with representatives fro Los Angeles. ng het into communications - mass media or, work experience while completing your telecom- graduate Editor in Chi..................ROB EARLE Managing Editor .........................AMY MINDELL News Editor..............................................PHILIP 1. 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