/ c .iriuulxi YI .C .nn October 1, 1990copgh1990 Vol. Cl, No.18 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, Otbr119 The Mcsgan ay Law House sends 'students boycott firms budget plan to Senate by Shalini Patel * More than 75 University law stu- dents signed a petition last week agreeing not to accept jobs from 17 law firms identified by the AFL-CIO as "union-busters." During the next two weeks more than 600 employers from all over the country will be on campus to re- cruit law students. The boycott, orchestrated by the Law School chapter of the National *Lawyers Guild, a civil rights organi- zation, began last Monday and will continue until Oct. 12. According to the guild, a number of firms conducting interviews at the University this year represent man- agement in labor disputes. Most op- erate within ethical boundaries, the guild admits, but five of those firms "go far beyond traditional labor law representation of management." "They will basically come in and teach supervisors to pressure people not to vote union, promote anti- union speeches, and go to the edge of legality," said University law stu- dent and project organizer Robert Seltzer. Under the National Labor Relations Act, workers have the le- gal right to organize, and any em- See BOYCOTT, page 2 WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres- ident Bush and congressional leaders yesterday forged a $500 billion, five- year compromise package of tax in- creases and spending cuts, spurring Congress to quick action on a stop- gap spending measure needed to avoid slashes in federal services to- day. The House approved the tempo- rary financing bill just three hours after the budget agreement was de- scribed by President Bush in a Rose Garden announcement. The Senate was poised to act later in the evening. "It is balanced, it is fair, and in my view it is what the United States of America needs at this point in its history," Bush said in announcing an agreement that concluded budget ne- gotiations that began in May. The package contained $134 bil- lion in new tax revenues, including new taxes on gasoline, cigarettes, al- cohol and luxury items. Medicare costs for the elderly and disabled were increased; defense spending was slashed as well. The House passed what is called a continuing appropriations resolu- tion to keep the government operat- ing at full speed through next Friday while lawmakers weigh the proposed budget compromise. The resolution, sent quickly to the Senate, also includes $2 billion in new appropriations for the Desert Shield operations in the Persian Gulf. House Speaker Thomas Foley (D-Wash.) praised the compromise, but agreed with Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell (Maine), who said, "Now comes the hard part," in pushing it past special interest groups and through Congress. The compromise would shear $40 billion off the deficit expected for the new fiscal year. Without action, the 1991 shortfall was projected to hit $294 billion, $73 billion higher than the previous federal record for red ink and almost triple the shortfall the administration said it anticipated in January. White House budget director Richard Darman attributed the higher deficit projection to the deteriorating economy and growing projections of the costs of rescuing the savings and loan industry. "It's going to be very painful for a lot of people," said Dole, predict- ing a tough fight for enough votes to get the agreement past Congress. Touchdown JOSE JUAREZDaily Jon Vaughn celebrates his touchdown in the first half of Saturday's game. The Wolverines defeated the Maryland Terrapins, 45-17. Local bars, liquor stores confiscate fake IDs by Janice Nuttle Either students on campus are becoming more cowardly, or fake IDs are getting bet- ter, because area bars and liquor retailers have been confiscating fewer fake IDs since im- plementing stricter policies. Ann Marie Stadler, general manager of the Blind Pig said, "On a busy weekend night we turn away five to six people be- cause their IDs just don't look right; two years ago it was double that." Their strict policy of accepting only drivers' licenses and passports as IDs keeps people from trying, said Stadler. Checkers know what to look for on out- of-state licenses by comparing them to those in a book which shows all licenses in the country. Often times, the picture, expiration date, signature, or lamination are clues to checkers that the ID is counterfeit. "Most often we see people borrowing le- gitimate IDs from their friends, we catch them by checking the picture closely and by asking them what their zip code or zodiac sign is," Stadler said. Jack Weinmann, Village Corner Party Store personnel manager, has also seen a de- cline in the number of fake IDs. "Before we started prosecuting two years ago, we would see 10 to 15 IDs on a Friday night, now we collect 10 to 15 a month," he said. Wein- mann attributed the decline to the store's policy of turning fake IDs over to the police. "We know what practically every ID in the country looks like," he said. "Because of extra enforcement of liquor laws, retailers have to be extremely careful." The Quality Bar also has a policy of confiscating IDs, said Beth Reibel, assistant manager. "The number of fake IDs we get on a busy night varies radically, but there is a definite increase when the students are in town." One to seven fake IDs are confiscated on See FAKE, Page 2 Plan drafted for re-development of .east Detroit Detroit (AP) - A new proposal would wipe out much of Detroit's crumbling eastside and build a new town with some self-governing powers, including its own police de- partment and schools with manda- tory drug tests. 11 The multimillion-dollar plan, drafted by Detroit-area developers and businesses including Michigan National Corp. and the Walbridge Aldinger construction firm, has yet to be handed over to the city. A pre- liminary proposal, drafted by Partnership to Re-invest in Detroit's Excellence (PRIDE), was obtained by The Detroit News for a report in Sunday editions. The 740-acre community, about 2 miles east of downtown in an area now pockmarked with abandoned and burnout buildings, would foster "practical family values...in an at- mosphere free of drugs, prostitution, pornography, gambling an other criminal activities," the proposal says. The new town would be home to about 7,500 people of mixed races and income levels. It would have a semi-autonomous government with authority to control its own devel- opment and social programs. The community would have a separate police department, but the plan did not specify how Detroit would be involved in the hiring or running of the force. It would also have its own school district that would require drug tests and weapons searches. The plan calls for Detroit to de- molish buildings, relocate residents, clean up environmental hazards and1 relocate roads and utilities. When that is completed, the developers want the city to hand over the prop- See DETROIT, Page 2 Saddam requests peaceful discourse by the Associated Press Saddam Hussein adopted a more conciliatory stance yesterday in the nearly 2-month-old Persian Gulf cri- sis, urging peaceful dialogue instead of "threats and warnings." In a message broadcast on Iraqi TV and radio, Saddam also said he no longer opposed the involvement of foreign powers in the search for a settlement to the crisis, which was touched off by Iraq's Aug. 2 inva- sion of Kuwait. Saddam's speech, read by an an- nouncer, said tensions can be reduced in the gulf "if dialogue replaces the policy of threats and warnings, if the language of peaceful politics replaces the policy of troop buildups and threats of the use of force." "Peace could not be achieved without the settlement of all the problems of the region," he said. European and Israeli military ana- lysts say there is still a window for peace, before the effects of sanctions sink in further and U.S.-led forces in Saudi Arabia become strong enough to consider launching a military op- eration to push Iraq out of Kuwait. "I think another six to eight weeks is available to prevent a con- flict, but after that it becomes al-, most inevitable," said Paul Beaver, publisher of Jane's Defense Weekly. With the United Nations demand- MICHELLE GUY/Daily Hispanic heritage- The Mexican dance group Los Hijos de Aztlan performs at the Latino Arts Extravaganza Friday in the Pendelton Room of the Union. *Democrats seek to bag 'user-fee' proposal by Donna Woodwell Daily City Reporter Ann Arbor residents may not end up paying a $1 per-bag user fee for city garbage collection after all. Ann Arbor City Council Demo- crats will propose a resolution at tonight's council meeting asking for * an average of 4.6 percent budget cuts at the Republican Caucus last night. "I have trouble supporting major cuts in mid-fiscal year," said coun- cilmember Jerry Schleicher (R-4th Ward). "I think the proposal is very po- litical and downright stupid," coun- cilmember Ingrid Sheldon (R-2nd Ward). "It is very unfair on depend the (city council's recent) proposal was not thought out that well." He added he didn't think the proposal was designed to encourage recycling but rather to raise money to cover the Solid Waste department's deficit. The department needs the extra revenue to make up for a $1.7 mil- lion deficit. Increasing costs for transport and dumping at the Brown- ing-Ferris Industries (BFI) landfill in Salem Township account for much of the deficit. The city's own landfill is full and currently undergoing expansion fi- nanced by $28 million raised in a bond issue vote last April. These funds are earmarked for cleaning up the city's landfill, construction of a recycling plant and monthly curbside pick-ups and do not cover increases in solid waste disposal costs. The city's budget is determined in April. Any changes made to the budget needs eight city council votes to pass. /' 0A , IA 10 0AI