4 Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 30, 1988 Local group opposes SSC BY JONATHAN SCOTT A newly-formed community group presented U.S. Department of Energy officials Tuesday with a petition expressing their opposition to the high-tech Superconducting Super Collider. One thousand Stockbridge area residents signed the petition, urging the department to look elsewhere for a site where the high-tech project could be based. "THE MAIN thing (we're op- posed to) is that this entire area is zoned mostly for agriculture and recreation," said opposition member Jan Vorndran. ."In order for this facility to be here, the whole area must be re-zoned to light and medium industrial." The Michigan site has emerged from among 25 states along with, as some reports indicate, two other state finalists - Texas and Illinois -left vying for the SSC. The proposed high-tech project would use 10,000 superconducting magnets to propel two beams of protons at nearly the speed of light ii opposite directions around a 53- mile underground tunnel. 'The people of this com- munity and Michigan in general are going to be heavily subsidizing this project, allowing indus- trial and high-tech firms a free ride.' - Munith resident Anita Monical-Hoopes. INDUSTRIAL and scientific re- searchers would use the collider to study the nature of matter. Support for SSC among residents in the Stockbridge area, which was initially strong, seems to be dwin- dling. A June survey by the Institute of Social Research indicated 72 per- cent of area residents favored the project. But during the public hearing sponsored Tuesday by the D.O.E., dozens of residents protested outside of Stockbridge High School. At least half of those attending the hearing wore "Say No To SSC" buttons. "I think if the ISR were to con- duct another survey today, the num- bers would be different," Vorndran said. "I think it'd be about 60 per- cent against and 40 for." RESIDENTS IN opposition to the SSC seem most concerned about the drain on public resources that it will incur once construction begins on the project, as well as during subsequent operation. "The people of this community and Michigan in general are going to be heavily subsidizing this project, allowing industrial and high-tech firms a free ride," said Munith resi- dent Anita Monical-Hoopes. She noted that Consumer's Power will be significantly reducing the operation costs of the SSC, in turn, substantially raising the electrical rates of the local residents to com- pensate. "What this is, essentially," she said, "is public subsidy, private profit." BUT UNIVERSITY Physics Profs. Gordon Kane and Lawrence 'It's a wonderful instru- ment that will be used to answer a lot of basic questions about our search to understand the laws of nature.' -Gordon Kane, 'U' physics prof. A Seniors Be Seen Monday, October 30 is the first day of Senior portrait photography. Y uMake sure you are a part of your Senior yearbook. fCe Portraits will be taken on the 2nd floor of the h ereUGLi. If you don't yet have an appointment, II . 'contact the Ensian at 764-0561 or stop by the UGLi to make one before all slots are filled. Jones, both of whom have worked on the project, are enthusiastic about the SSC in Stockbridge. Jones said Michigan would make an excellent host for the facility be- cause of the proximity of both the University of Michigan and Michi- gan State University to the site. "It's a wonderful instrument that will be used to answer a lot of basic questions about our search to understand the laws of nature," Kane said. Funds Continued from Page 1 435 members of the House of Representatives are women. "You need to hear... a woman's persepective," Evans said. Pursell had $114,853 in PAC contributions as of August 1. He has received donations from many out- of-state utilities companies, which Cates said was most likely because he sits on the House Energy and Water Development Subcommittee. Oil, communications, defense, pharmaceutical, medical, and bank- ing PACs have also donated to Pursell. Cates pointed out that many na- tional groups, such as the National Association of Realtors, which has donated $5,000 to Pursell, have local chapters as well. Cates and Evans agreed that the incumbent candidate usually has the. upper hand in any election. An in- cumbent has name recognition, a record as a winner to run on, and a proven ability to raise funds. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Man hijacks Brazilian jet RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - Police shot and wounded an armed hijacker as he tried to board a getaway plane with a hostage in central Brazil yesterday, ending a day-long ordeal that left one person dead and four injured, officials said. The rest of the passengers and crew of VASP flight 375 were released unharmed. The co-pilot of the jet was killed and three other crew members injured, said authorities. They described the hijacker as mentally disturbed. Holding a .38-caliber revolver and taking the jet's pilot with him, the hijacker descended from the Boeing 737 parked on the runway of the Santa Genoveva airport in Goiania, 850 miles northwest of Rio de Janeiro. A small Brazilian-made Bandeirantes plane was to take him and the pilot to Brasilia, the capital, said air force spokesperson Col. Eden Avolinsque. Official pleads guilty to DSS embezzlement scam LANSING - A former state official has pleaded guilty to 13 criminal counts for his part in a scheme to embezzle $628,000 from the Department of Social Services. Under a plea agreement with the Ingham County prosecutor, Terry Dale Brenner is expected to explain a scam that diverted money from the department to non-existent day-care centers in four counties. "He agreed to sit down with Lansing and state attorney general investigators and explain his role in this matter, naming all of the participants he knows to be involved," said Ingham County Prosecutor Donald Martin. "It's a conditional plea that rests on his 100 percent cooperation." If he doesn't cooperate, Brenner will face a circuit court trial. He originally wascharged with. 30 counts of larceny by false pretense and three counts of forgery in Ingham County. He also faces similar charges in Wayne, Oakland, and Livingston counties. Candidates exchange jabs George Bush and Michael Dukakis chorused praise for America's triumphant return to space yesterday, then swapped charges over the environment as they resumed daily combat in a hardfought race for the White House. Dukakis stood with actor and environmentalist Robert Redford at his side as he attacked Bush as a man whom polluters should love. "Calling George Bush an environmentalist is like calling Dan Quale a statesman," the Democrat said in a two-sided attack against both members of the Republican ticket. Bush, who toured the Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Mount Clemens yesterday, got off a double edged attack of his own when he scoffed at Dukakis' claims of being tough on crime. "If you believe that, he's got some bottled water from Boston Harbor he'd like to sell you," the vice president said in a crack about Boston's own pollution problems. Insurance bill. clears House LANSING -- A bill requiring some health insurers to provide coverage for adolescent substance abusers and legislation regulating truck safety and solid waste cleared the State House of Representatives yesterday. The representatives then adjourned until after the Nov. 8 election. A bill prohibiting a health insurer from refusing to enter into contracts with providers of care for adolescent substance abuse patients cleared the House, and will now be sent to Gov. James Blanchard. Three truck safety bills approved by the House would place tighter restrictions on the industry by increasing driver education requirements and stepping up enforcement of safety inspections. Another bill passed would prohibit a dump from accepting solid waste from outside of Michigan without the approval of the county where the dump is located. Both measures will now go to the Senate. EXTRAS Flourescent toy guns may replace real-looking ones LANSING - Toy guns would have to be fluorescent orange to avoid confusion with the real thing under a bill approved by a House committee. The Committee on Consumer Afffairs on Wednesday passed legislation that would require a toy gun sold after July 1,1990, to have a fluorescent orange barrel, receiver and plug. The measure, sponsored by Rep. Burton Leland (D-Detroit), also institutes a fine of up to $50 for each toy gun sold in violation of the law. It would also be a felony to alter a real gun to make it look like a toy that complies with the standards. I 4 4} 4 5 The Zenith Data Systems Z-286 LP Desktop PC Includes Flat Tension Color Monitor - only: $2,417.00!! ZENITH INNOVATES AGAIN WITH THE NEW Z-286 LP THE AT COMPATIBLE THAT TRANSPORTS YOU FROM CAMPUS TO THE CORNER OFFICE! The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: January through April - $15 in Ann Arbor, $22 outside the city. 1988 spring, summer, and fall term rates not yet available. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the National Student News Service. Editor in Chief.........REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN ARTS STAFF: Marisa Anaya, Brian Berger, Sheala Durant Managing Editor........................MARTHA SEVETSON Michael Fischer, Margie Heinlen, Brian Jarvinen, Juliet News Editor.......................................EVE BECKER James, Mike Rubin, Ari Schneider, Lauren Shapiro, Chuck City Editor ..............MELISSA RAMSDELL Skarsaune, Mark Swartz, Marie W esaw. 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