OPINION w X -N : .:.. ...,, :,,.. ..:.:,::.:........ :. :.,,.. .,:...... ..: :: 'Z:_vC.{;. .- .:.+:.w.,::r{.cn":. ;.r.{..:':".'"{>:{{.'?, 3., .: :,'.?5:". ...%. tkY ,l r '.:'k+.:.?+".. ... '" t i., +. s.-:h ,.. .: .. .. ... 4 ARTS 7 SPORTS * U Chief Justice Rehnquist in review Cy's the limit: If my Friends Wisconsin coach Morton and the NCAA Niditoanl reo Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 32 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 19, 1989 ColgM 1US TMe Mcpu Ofil More killed tha Ln 270 Calif. in Masked man Charles Ladd of Fantasy Attic Costumes on Main Street tries to sell Justin Van Peelvoorde, a junior at Community High, various masks, accessories and bloody legs for halloween. 'U' to propose state budget request at regents' meeting earthqi OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Rescuers searched with dogs and sensitive microphones yesterday for the last possible survivors of an earthquake that killed at least 270 people, as thousands of Californians picked their way through glass-strewn streets in search of a semblance of normal life. Across San Francisco Bay in Oakland, res- cuers were stunned to discover a survivor within the tons of steel and concrete left when Tuesday's earthquake brought one level of In- terstate 880 down atop another. "We have confirmed that there is one person alive apparently in a car underneath the top level," said Oakland police Lt. Christina Wraa. "Initially we heard a voice and we sent rescue workers up there." She said she had confirmed by touch that there was at least one person alive in a car. Approximately 250 people were feared en- tombed in the twisted wreckage, and at least 21 others were dead elsewhere in the quake area. Some 1,400 people were injured, said state emergency services spokesperson Tom Mullins. Interstate 880, also known as the Nimitz Freeway, collapsed during Tuesday evening's devastating 6.9-magnitude earthquake. It is one of the oldest highways in the area, built in the 1950s. State department officials said the collapsed section had been reinforced in 1977 in the first phase of a three-phase program to make the state's highways earthquake-proof. The next phase, which began in the last year, had been delayed on the Nimitz pending an engineering study, Caltrans chief engineer, Bill Schaefer said. Asked whether the roadway should have been safe from earthquake damage, Schaefer said, "There's no such thing as an earthquake- proof structure, certainly." However he said he was shocked that the section collapsed, and added: "We thought it would withstand the maximum credible East iake earthquake we could have in this area, anything that would happen in this area." George Donovan was driving his tractor- trailer rig on the upper-deck of the interstate when the quake hit. "The pavement started to move. I had waves of asphalt come up over my windshield," he said. "It was undulating all around me. It was like a Disney trip." "It was just like a war zone. I literally saw blood running down into the gutter," said Don Rich, who helped pull people from cars mo- ments after the freeway collapse. The search was moving "slowly and metic- ulously" because the collapsed highway was like "a house of cards" that could crash down at See QUAKE, page 2 Quake affects ' by Noelle Vance Paily Government Reporter The budget cycle will begin again to- day when Provost Charles Vest presents the University's state budget request to the University's Board of Regents. The request, which has not yet been re- leased to the public, is the University's of- ficial estimate of the amount of state ap- propriations it would like to receive for fiscal year 1990-91. The regents must approve the budget before it goes to the state legislature. The request must be presented to state officials A by Oct. 31. "The best way to get an idea about what the University's state budget request will look like is to look at last year's re- quest," said Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs Robert Holbrook. Last year, the University requested $13.1 million from the state, though the University's total estimated need was about $51.1 million. University officials planned to make up the $38 million not requested from the state through tuition and reallocation. It was the first year the University tried to base its expenditures on a realistic guess of the amount of money the state would provide for higher education, Hol- brook said. Previously, University budget requests so overestimated the ability of the state to provide funds that a wide discrepancy ex- isted between the amount of money re- quested by the University and actually al- located by the state. But even with the lower calculations, state appropriations fell short of the Uni- versity's stated need. As a result, University officials rec- ommended a 9.6 percent tuition hike last summer to make up the loss of anticipated state funds and See BUDGET, page 3 students zby Ian Hoffman Daily Staff Writer Though Monday's earthquake that ripped through the San Francisco Bay.area lasted only 15 secondsgits shock waves are still being felt by Ann Arbor students and visitors. John Newby, an LSA senior from Canyon, t Calif., said 10 minutes before his father's flight from Redding to San Jose was to land, the earthquake hit the San Jose Airport and knocked out communication with the control tower. Instead of risking the landing, the pilot r returned the flight to Redding. "He finally got hold of my mother four hours later," he said. "He gave her a list of 20 numbers of family members of the people on t the flight so she could call and tell them that See TREMORS, page 2 German Shuttle takes off without a hitch CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Space shuttle Atlantis finally lifted off yesterday and soared into orbit and its astronauts started the Galileo probe on a six-year journey to Jupiter for the closest look yet at the colossus of the solar system. "You looked marvelous going up," Mission Control told comman- der Don Williams as the winged spacecraft reached orbit after two launch postponements. "I feel a lot better," said Williams. After Atlantis had made five trips around the world, Galileo was ejected from the cargo bay by springs at 7:15 p.m. EDT, precisely on scedule. The Galileo's troubles-including money problems over the years and recent protests over its nuclear power See SHUTTLE, page 2 party leader steps, down Honecker replaced by Krenz; no, major policy changes predicted BERLIN (AP) - Hard-line East German leader Erich Honecker, who oversaw the building of the Berlin Wall, stepped down yesterday and was replaced by a younger Commu- nist Party loyalist amid growing un- rest and calls for democratic reform. Honecker's replacement, 52-year- old Egon Krenz, has a reputation as a hard-liner opposed to the growing pro-democracy movement. Two other ruling Politburo members also lost their jobs in a shake-up during a meeting of the Communist Party Central Commit- tee, but changes from Honecker's course were unlikely. The state-run news agency ADN said Krenz will take over as Com- munist Party chief, head of state and head of the military, replacing his mentor in all three roles. Communist Party leaders have madea clear thev mill rPoct ,nrn- to bring the energy to bear that the fate of our party and people requires today and in the future." he said in a statement carried by ADN. Krenz, the youngest member of the Politburo, is known as a tough backer of the country's orthodox communist structure. He had been in charge of internal security issues and government-run youth organiza- tions while being groomed as Ho- necker's successor. "I told the Central Committee that I realize this is a difficult task that I have taken over," Krenz told East German television after his ap- pointment. "In this very complicated time there is much work before us." Tens of thousands of East Ger- mans have fled the country in recent months, turning their backs on the rigid authoritarian system, and thou- sands of citizens have staged massive demonstrations in recent weeks. During a recent visit to China, Bl ow 'em away A University employee blows leaves near the Diag yesterday. Rehnquist to speak today at the Law School by Karen Akerlof Rehnquist's planned speech is titled, "The The fellowship was established in the na Dai l Staff Writer Imneachment Trial of Samuel Chase Before the Detroit nhilanthronist. ame of a