01 Page '2- The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 13, 1989 I Medical Continued from Page 1 charged rent, he said. Besides not having space avail- able for new research projects, other problems result from the lack of space. Without space, the Medical School is unable to garner funds for new projects, and must use laborato- ries that are often outmoded for to- day's research. Every researcher submitting a , grant proposal must inform the foundation of where he or she intends to research. If research space cannot be found, then the Chair of the De- partment must deny the proposal, Goldstein explained. "If we get a grant we are morally committed to providing research space (for that project)," he said. In addition, finding funds to ren- ovate old laboratories is difficult. "The allocation of state legislature [funds] to the University hasn't kept pace with the needs of the Univer- sity," Goldstein said. Private contri- butions are hard to find because "not Bush Continued from Page 1 acknowledged that he faces huge ",osts both in the cleanup of nuclear ,,,weponsfacilities and the crisis of the savings and loan industry. However, Bush, who during the campaign promised not to raise taxes, said he would solve both ,,problems "within the confines, the * parameters of the commitment I made to the American people." In introducing Watkins Bush said, "I'm committed to solving the .problems that exist within our atomic energy-defense complex." He refused to embrace the rec- ommendations of a report sent to 'resident Reagan calling for spend- ing $81 billion to modernize the nuclear weapons complex over the next two decades and the closing of our major facilities. Bush said he many people like to give money for old space," Goldstein said. It is easier to get funds for new buildings, he said, because "there's nothing like having your name on a building or a room if it's nice and new." Some of the outdated laborato- ries could even become dangerous if not renovated, Goldstein said. Some problems in old laborato- ries include faulty or inefficient elec- trical systems, poor ventilation and bad plumbing, said Medical School Facilities Director Horace Bomar. One dangerous problem is the deterioration of fume hoods designed to separate the researcher from harm-. ful airborne materials by drawing the air via a fan out of the building. When the fume hoods gets old, the quantity of air pulled through the hood decreases. One fume hood costs between $5,000-6,000, and its installation costs anywhere from $25,000- 70,000, Bomar said. However, Gold- stein said that renovation is still cheaper than new construction. wanted Watkins to review all op- tions before devising an energy pol- icy 'that clearly will include the safety and cleanup"of the nuclear plants. Bush said development of nuclear power for domestic as well as mili- tary needs was "not at all incompatible" with safety and, envi- ronmental concerns. Acknowledging that Bennett has been closely identified with the Re- publican Party's conservative wing, Bush said that his new "drug czar" would have to work with Democrats and Republicans alike. Replying to a question, Bush said he was "not entirely" comfortable with the cost of his inauguration, which could reach $25 million. However, Bush said, "I have no apologies for the way we are doing it at all," because the country deserves a celebration like the inauguration every four years. Hacking it up JOSE JUAREZ/Daiy LSA first-year student Doug Lucas takes advantage of the break in icy temperatures to play hackeysack in the Diag yesterday. Teacher's.unions support Bennett 4. IV.Geri -Continued from Page 1 n Wednesday night and charged with forging shipping documents for goods delivered to Libya. A spokesperson for West German :Fipance ministry said Gedopt was - Rel igious Services American Baptist Campus Center First Baptist Church Huron St. (between State & Division) 'f across from Campus Inn .Sunday: 9:55 Worship Service 11:15 Church school classes--all ages Wednesday at 5:30: free supper, fellow ship and Bible study. CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal Church Chaplaincy) 218 N. Division (At Catherine) Sunday Schedule Holy Eucharist - 5:00 p.m. -. Celebrant and Preacher: The Rev. Dr. Virginia Peacock Supper - 6:00 p.m. At 7:00 - Remembering Martin Luther King Jr. At Canterbury House Call 665-0606 CAMPUS CHAPEL Reverand Don Postema (just south of CCRB-off Washtenaw) Sunday 10 am: Jesus: The Boy and the Baptism 6 pm: "Let's Have Wine for Dinner" Service of Holy Communion Everyone Welcome! arrested on the basis of information provided by West Germany. He said the information was found by inves- tigators examining seized records of I.B.I. Engineering, a defunct Frank- furt company accused of involve- ment. An intelligence source said one reason for Bonn's "turnaround" was that connections found in the past two weeks gave new weight to in- formation investigators already had. Does Josh know everything about sex? t 1 i 1 .' DETROIT (AP) - The leaders of the nation's largest teacher unions yesterday offered qualified support for William Bennett as drug czar in the Bush administration but took a jab at their former adversary as education secretary. "The drug issue will require the collective support of the commu- nity. We commend the Bush admin- istration for recognizing the drug problem as a national problem," Mary Hatwood Futrell, president of the 1.9 million member National Education Association said in a news conference. "But we do have to recall during Bennett's tenure that he called for reductions in drug education in schools and drug testing among all school employees," she said. Read Woe Daipq C&1561j14 Bennett, named to the cabinet position by Bush yesterday, often was criticized by NEA and the American Federation of Teachers during his years as Education Secre- tary in the Reagan administration. Hatwood and Shanker said a new spirit of cooperation marks relations between the education community and the administration of President- elect Bush. "The reappointment of Laura Cavazos as secretary of education will keep education high on the agenda," Futrell said. "Cooperation with Reagan and Bennett wasn't there." Bennett, who resigned the educa- tion post last year, was replaced by Cavazos. Futrell said she and Shanker at- tended a White House workshop on education Tuesday that included Reagan, Bush, and Cavazos. They applauded a plan detailed at the workshop to create open schools in which students are given the option of deciding which schools to attend. "Reagan and Bush have moved away from an emphasis on private and parochial schools to public schools," said Shanker, head of the 665,000-member union. Both unions opposed Reagan proposals to offer tax credits and vouchers to parents of children at- tending private and parochial schools. Futrell said the open-school con- cept have potential if tailored for in- dividual districts. PASS IT AROUNDI Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Earthquake survivors found below wreckage after 35 days Workers extricated six men from the rubble of a nine-story apartment building in Leninakan 35 days after the Armenian earthquake buried them in a small, dark cellar stocked with canned goods, Tass reported yesterday. The men were found Wednesday, weeks after authorities gave up searching for survivors of the Dec. 7 quake that killed 25,000 people in northwestern Armenia. One of the six suffered a broken arm and the others had only minor injuries, Tass said. "On the day of the earthquake, I asked five neighbors to help me carry two heavy wooden kegs to the basement," survivor Aikaz Akopyan was quoted as telling Tass. "Just then, we suddenly heard a terrible roar. The earth trembled, and walls began to collapse. I thought a war had started." The men were brought to Yerevan hospitals yesterday where they remained, according to hospital personnel and Tass. Racial-medical biases shown CHICAGO - Blacks have less access to medical care than whites, are included in fewer trials of new drugs and - in at least one state - tend to get less aggressive treatment for heart disease, new research indicates. One in 11 Blacks reported not seeing a doctor for economic reasons, compared with one in 20 whites, according to a, 1986 nationwide telephone survey of 10,130 representative U.S. residents, researchers said. Blacks were less likely to have health insurance, and those who did not were considerably less likely to be covered by a private insurance carrier and more likely to live in a state with less generous Medicaid benefits. The report, which appears in today's Journal of the American Medical Association, was performed by Drs. Mark Wenneker and Arnold Epstein of Harvard School of Public Health State to raise employees' pay LANSING, Mich. -State workers will receive a pay increase of 3.5 percent next year, under a proposal adopted yesterday by the Michigan Civil Service Commission. The pay raises, approved on a 3-0 vote, will cost the state treasury $67.38 million and will go to 43,710 union employees and 16,800 non- union employees. "We'll live with it," said Phillip Thompson, spokesperson for a coalition of five unions that had sought pay increases of six percent. Increases in other Great Lake States are averaging 4.9 percent, Thompson said. But states that have given state workers larger pay increases are now running deficits, said George G. Matish, director of the Office of State Employer. The Commission's action will be included in the budget sent law- makers this session. Lawmakers have 60 days after they receive the bud- get to reject the increases or uniformly reduce them. Investigators check engines of crashed 737 jet for defects . LONDON - Investigators got a first look at the engines of a crashed Boeing 737 yesterday and British airlines flying similar craft said they found no evidence of faults in the engine warning systems. The engines from the British Midland Boeing 737-400 that crashed Sunday were removed from an embarkment along a freeway near the town of Kegworth and taken to nearby East Midlands airport. The plane, bound for Belfast, Northern Ireland, crashed while trying an emergency landing at the airport, killing 44 people and injuring 82. Investigators are trying to determine why the plane's apparently working right engine was turned off during the flight when later' examination showed it was the left engine that caught fire. Speculations have focused on a faulty engine warning system and crew error. EXTRAS Retton gets boot; files suit WASHINGTON - Former teen-age Olympic star Mary Lou Retton is taking two bowling industry groups to court in a contract dispute re- lated to the fact that she's not a kid anymore. The gymnast and her family are suing the two trade groups in U.S. District Court for $250,000, alleging the organizations unfairly ended a four-year promotional agreement that began in 1985. Last June, the trade groups notified Retton and her family that the agreement was being' halted, the suit says, "on the grounds that Mary Lou Retton, due to changes in her physical image caused by her maturing as a woman was no longer a suitable spokesperson." The court papers did not elaborate. The suit, filed Monday, alleges breach of the agreement. Retton, of Fairmont, W. Va., as a 16-year-old captured the all-around gold metal in women's gymnastics at the 1984 Summer Olympic Games. 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: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $25.00 in-town and $35 out-of-town, for fall only $15.00 in-town and $20.00 out-of-town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. PHONE NUMBERS: News (313) 764-0552, Opinion 747-2814, Arts 763-0379, Sports 747-3336, Cir- culation 764-0558, Classified advertising 764-0557, Display advertising 764-0554, Billing 764--0550 t. 0 0 *1 But what he does know will keep you talkinq for days! Mon. and Tues. 7:30pm Power Center Free Admission FRIDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT FISH AND CHIPS HOMEMADE BEER BATTER $5.25 .'LA' 'reUL.L7 Tem '1ATi~~A pcI OAJ DAJLHUMOR MAA;A /55PEEDSWEIRD, CAR REA FR5'LVER5IV4ECo , S' TaR, ,AR icW s P5 ANAa -HRlguNPtsY / come 'rob OUjR offiCE'htefICJt 9) r) . .Irma D Ii.. :O P *v+ v6 338 State Street 996-9191 J EDITORIAL STAFF: .-- . -I.. Editor in Chief Rebecca Blumenstein Sports Editor Jeff Rush Managing Editor Martha Sevetson Associate Sports Editors Jule Holman, Adam Scheter, News Editor Eve Becker Adam Schrager, Pete Steinert, University Editor Andrew Mills Doug Volan Opinion Page Editors Elizabeth EschAmy Harmon Arts Editors Usa Magnin, Jim Poniewozi Photo Editors Karen Handelman, John Munson Books Marie Wesaw Weekend Editor Alyssa Lustigman Film Mark Shaiman Associate Weekend Editor Andrew Mills Theatre Cherie Cary Music Mark Swartz News Staff: Victoria Bauer, Scott Chaplin, Laura Cohn, Miguel Cruz, Marion Davis, Paul De Rooij, Noah Finkel, Kelly Gatord, Alex Gordon, Stacey Gray, Tara Gruzen, Kristin Hoffman, Donna ladipado, Steve Knopper, Mark Kolar, Ed Krachmer, Scott Lahde, Rose Ughouirn, Kristine LaLonde, Michael Lustig, Fran Obeid, Usa Pollak, Micah Schmidt, David Schwartz, Jonathan Scott, Anna Senkevitch, Noelle Shadwidc, Monica Smith, Nahan Smith, Vera Songwe, Jessica Strick, Usa Winer. Opinion Staff: Muzzamil Ahned, Bit Gladstone, Rolie Hudson, Marc Klein, Karen Miler, Rebecca Novick, Marcia Ochoa, Elizabeth Paige, i. Matt Miler, Sandra Steingraber, Sue van Hattum. Sports Staff: Adam Benson, Steve Blonder, Steve Cohen, Richard Eisen, David Feldman, Lisa Gibert, hike Gil, Steve Ginns, Andy Gottesman, Karen Gromala, David Hyman, Mark Katz, Bethany Kipec, Lory Knapp, Jod Leichinan, Eric Lemont, Taylor Lincoln, Josh Mitnck, Jay Moses, Miachael Salinsky, John Samnick, Jeff Sheran. Arts Staff. Greg Baise, Mary Beot Barber, Beh Colquitt, Sheala Durant, Brent Edwards, Greg Fardand, Michasl Paul Fisher, Dike Fischer, Robert Faggert, Liam Raherty, Andrea Gacki, Lynn Gottleman, Darin GreyerbieN, Margie Heinien, Brian Jarviven, Alysa Katz, D. Mara Lowenstei, Kim Mc Ginnis, Mike Rubin, Art Schneider, Lauren Shapiro, Tony Siber, Chuck Skasaune, Usha Tummala, Pan Warshay, Nabeel Zuberi. Photo Staff. Alexandra Brez, Jessica Greene, Jose Juiarez, Robi Loznk, David Lubliuner, Lisa Wax. Weekend Staff: John Shea List Editor: Angela Michaels fa 1 N &~l1 ~ t~ Wlf f~ t Weekend Staff: John Shea List Editor: Anqela MktLaels