Reagan agrees to pay raise WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan has decided to approve a 50 percent pay increase for 2,500 top federal officials, including nmembers of Congress, and will urge lawmakers to bar outside income sluch as speaking fees, a spokesperson for the president said yesterday. Reagan plans to send members of Congress a letter today urging them to support the pay raise, deputy press secretary Leslyc Arsht said in a statement released by the White House. Reagan could have modified the proposal made last month by the Commission on Executive, SLegislative and Judicial Salaries. Under the law, unless both the House and Senate vote to head off the pay increases, they will aitomatically take effect 30 days after the plan is submitted to Congress with the proposed federal budget on Monday. The commission recommended ffat mcribers of Congress and federal district judges, who now make $89,000 a year, be paid $135,000. The House speaker would go from $115,000 to $175,000, and Majority and minority leaders form $99,500, to $155,000. Top executive-branch officials such as Cabinet members would get raises from itheir current $99,500 to S155,0(0.) The commission also r commended that Congress raise the president's pay to about S350,000 from the current $200,000 which has been fixed since 1969. The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 6,1989 - Page 5 . . ROBIN LOZNAK/Daily Hail to the Victors Employees of Moe's Sports pose in front of their display, which celebrates Michigan's Rose Bowl victory. From left are Tonie Venic Stephenson, and store general manager Debra Bishop. Regents approve Vest, Atkins BY MARION DAVIS The University's Board of Re- gents formally approved former En- gineering Dean Charles Vest's pro- motion to University Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost at: its December meeting. The regents' action came as no surprise after University President James Duderstadt chose Vest as his second-in-command in early Decem- ber. Prof. Daniel Atkins, an associate engineering dean, will serve as in- terim dean for one year, until the permanent replacement for Vest is appointed. The regents also approved Atkins' temporary appointment last month. Robert Holbrook, associate vice. president for academic affairs, sail last night that a search committee for the permanent engineering dean will be formed "very shortly, maybe in the next few days." Holbrook said he has just received responses to his questionnaires about the committee's structure, which have been circulating among engi- neering faculty since early Decem, ber. High-level University searches generally last a year. Vest has been at the University since 1963, when he enrolled as a graduate student in mechanical engi- neering. He earned his bachelor's de- gree from West Virginia University and his master's and doctorate from Michigan. Atkins received his Ph.D. i computer science from the Univer- sity of Illinois and joined the U-M Department of Engineering and Computer Science in 1972 as assis tant professor. Both appointments went into ef feet last Sunday. R'A U59 Cho' ed6 . Study: Poor smLoke more CHICAGO (AP) - Smoking, once a flaunted habit of the sophisticated and high-class, is more a mark of the poor and less educated almost 25 years after the government first warned of to- bacco's dangers, researchers say. "Smoking prevalence has declined across all education groups, but the decline has occurred five times faster among the higher educated com- pared with the less educated," said researchers at the national Centers for Disease Control in At- lanta. From 1974 to 1985, the proportion of smok- ers among people who had completed four years of college plummeted by more than a third, from 28.5 percent to 18.4 percent, the researchers re- ported in Friday's Journal of the American Medi- cal Association. But the corresponding drop in the smoking rate among people who had never graduated from high school was only 2.1 percentage points, from 36.3 percent to 34.2 percent, the researchers found. A spokesperson for the Tobacco Institute, a Washington-based group representing the tobacco industry, said the study only confirms that people in that segment of society enjoy smoking. "The antismoking forces should not adopt some paternalistic attitude saying these people are less in a position to take information on smoking and health and make a rational decision on whether or not they should smoke," said Gary Miller. Women who had never graduated from college took up the habit in greater numbers than they dropped it, with the proportion of such women who smoked reaching an all=time high of 44.4 percent in 1985, the researchers said. "Smoking is decreasing at a steady rate," but the decline has been unequal across "sociodemographic subpopulations of society," they said. GM president happy with improvement DETROIT (AP) - A Happy General Motors Corp.. President Robert Stempel said yesterday the nation's largest automaker had turned the corner toward industry leadership, but he stopped short of predicting if GM's Chevrolet Division would pass Ford in car and truck sales. Stempel, venturing onto the floor of the North American International Auto Show shortly after GM's year- end sales figures were released said the 5.5 percent increase in 1988 car and light truck sales over the year before showed that GM was on the road back. "The numbers have started to move in the right way," he said, adding that the 1.7 million truck GM sold during 1988 was a record. The company said it sold 3.6 mil- lion cars last year. Ford Motor Co., meanwhile, said it sold 2.2 million cars and 1.5 mil- lion trucks in 1988, while Chrysler Corp. sold 1.1 million cars and nearly 1 million trucks. But Stempel declined to speculate when Chevrolet could regain the lead it once held over Ford. "I'm certainly pushing them," he said. "The customer is going to de- cide when we catch and pass Ford." During the past few months, GM has surprised analysts with swelling sales and its third-quarter earnings. One analyst who hasn't been too surprised is Charles Brady of Oppenheimer & Co. of New York. Yesterday, he said analysts com- ing to the show and seeing the cars that GM and other U.S. automakers were displaying would start coming around to his way of thinking. "Competitors have found Detroit can do things," Brady said. Tickets on sale at the Michigan Union Ticket Office, Herb David Guitar Stud-W io, and all TicketMaster Outlets now; and all Schoblkids Records after Janu- ary 1,1989.g Charge by Phone 763-TKTS A Fundraiser for the Ark Accommodations by Ann Arbor Inn The Personal C' mn Major Events Presentation al lumn &'.CHIGAN DAILY( CLASSIF IED ADS a.I BE NICE TO YOURSELF BUY AATA SEMESTER PASS $75.00 CONVENIENT, ECONOMICAL UNLIMITED RIDES . rI THE Ann Arbor Transportation Authorfty FOR FURTHER INFORMATION EVOLUTION-MICRO TO MACRO? "Limited changes and adaptation is proven. The large scale observations appear to conclude that everything is tied to basic singular ancestry. Physiology, adaptation, and fossil records indicate we humans have our origin in the lowest of animal kingdoms."(?) Problem: (1) Physiology is considered only on a basis of assump- tions, similarity of ppearance does not prove ancestry. (2) No adaptation allows mixing and mingling of Families; strong deviations within Fa rtilies are seen, but the identity of the Family remains intact. (3) Fos!il records are jumbled,rincomplete for any varifiable conclusion to be stated as fact except that the retriev- able fossil itself did indeed exist at sometime in the past. To claim a lineage beyond limited adaptation on the basis of fossils is speculative wisling at best or at worst, deception. Thus, efforts to make limited adaptation a fact of origin of species is in vain. To fail to make the distinction of terms by cloaking all under "evolution" is lousy science and dishonest philosophy. J. Terry Wheeler Check out our new building and over 30 Hillel - affiliated groups at 1429 Hill Street - fo more Aformatom caR 76.060 Millel does not necessarily endorse the Daily's opinions or agree with Its editorial policies. CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. STadium 662-2756 I U CALL: 996-0400 VO LUNTEER. For overflow work or when your office copier is down, TE ((1, GOLDEN GATE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW SAN FRANCISCO I ij x. - I " you can depend on Kinko's Copy efficient quality work. * Pick Up & Delivery- " Convenient flours - * Quality Copies * " Binding Service - * On Time Service * * Transparencies - " Enlargements - CARING WARMS THE HEART! Center for fast, Facsimile Service Large Copy Jobs Confidentiality Laser Typesetting Collating Reductions Specialty Papers A three-week summer program designed to expose participants to what lawyers do, the American legal system, and the process of legal education July 10 through July 28, 1989 Evening & Saturday Program: Classes meet in the evenng, Monday through Thursday, and on Saturday morning. To learn about volunteer opportunities at The University of Michigan Medical Center ,Attend one of the following Information Meetings. I UI a