I I 41v :4 46V 40, ., t!g vrt Vol. Cl, No. 35 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Tuesday, October 23, 1990 TheMichigta Dail -- - - - . I Bill to *reduce pollution In Mich. DETROIT (AP) - Clean-air re- quirements agreed on by congres- sional negotiators would have a wide impact across Michigan, from auto companies to a homeowner painting a porch, the state's air quality chief said yesterday. Auto companies would have to use pollution controls and alternative fuels to cut tailpipe emissions 30 to 60 percent under the bill capping a decade of effort in Congress to amend the Clean Air Act. Detroit, Grand Rapids, and Muskegon would have to cut smog- producing emissions, said Robert Miller, chief of the state Natural Re- sources Department's Air Quality. Division. Companies that manufacture or use chemicals would have to cut their emissions of some 190 chemi- cals by 90 percent over the next decade, Miller said. "That will affect companies of all sizes throughout the state." Consumers would see changes from modified refrigeration and air conditioning equipment, to cuts in pollution from chlorofluorocarbon refrigerants, to changes in solvents used in paints, he said. "Every individual is likely to feel some effect," Miller said. "The cost has been estimated by the Environ- mental Protection Agency at $20 billion to $25 billion a year, and Michigan will feel some of that." But Miller said: "This won't sneak up and surprise anybody. All the major industries have had their technical people and lobbyists work- ing on it for the better part of a * Auto companies may ask Congress to ease other requirements such as fuel-economy standards to help companies meet clean-air stan- dards, General Motors Corp. spokesperson Bill Noack said. Eight begin for 'U by Josephine Ballenger Daily Crime Reporter Eight campus safety employees are cur- rently being trained to become University police officers, said Director of Department of Public Safety (DPS) Leo Heatley yester- day. Six security officers and two supervisors have been in training since Oct. 1 and will probably be on patrol by the end of the year, Heatley said. The officers, who have already been trained and certified by the state, will be dep- utized by the Washtenaw County sheriff and will enforce state law and Regental ordi- nances. They are the first of 24 officers whom the administration will hire during the next three years, following the University's Board of Regents' decision last June to depu- tize the campus safety office. Local groups have spoken to the trainees on racism, sexual assault, and homophobia to expose the group to "as many campus-re- lated issues as we can," Heatley said. Executive Director of University Rela- tions Walter Harrison said other projects to improve campus safety include increasing lighting, adding emergency phones, and ex- panding safety services. Total expenditure for new security mea- sures during the next three to four years - including implementation of the new police force - will exceed $2 million, Harrison said. Whether the new expenditures will re- sult in higher tuition rates is not yet known, he said. "We'll do what we can to reappropriate existing funds," Harrison said, "but it's pos- sible it'll cause higher tuition." A University Record article reported yes- terday the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC) has "improved facilities to help support expanded program- matic activities," and the University is ex- amining plans to increase Night Owl and North Campus bus services. )fficers raining patrol SAPAC moved to a bigger office this summer but has not received increased funding, SAPAC Director Julie Steiner reported. Steiner said the office has undergone continuous inter- nal improvements since its inception four and one-half years ago, but "wasn't given any more money" to do so. In addition, Steiner noted, increased lighting and phones are "real important for safety on campus, but they're not necessarily going to solve problems of rape on campus because 95 percent of rapes on campus are acquaintance rapes." "The best prevention is educational work in the area of sexual assault," Steiner said. Such See TRAINING, Page 2 Diag lights will be repaired, 'U' says by Jay MacNeil For the past three weeks, 39 sidewalk lamps around Angell Hall, the Diag and the Natural Science Building have not been work- ing. Jim Almashy, the University's General Foreman of Plant Operations, said he expects the situation - the result of a rainstorm sev- eral weeks ago - to be resolved in a week. The problem lies beneath the newly-land- scaped area between the Natural Science and Chemistry Buildings, directly north of the Diag. Rain seepage caused fragile underground aluminum cables to fault, putting the fixtures out of service, Almashy said. "Those cables are extremely fragile, and it doesn't take much for them to fault," he said. Detroit Edison, which will repair the elec- trical lines, began looking at the problem yes- terday and will begin the actual repairs today. "We want the students to know that we are aware of the problem," Almashy said, "and I think we're taking the appropriate steps to- wards a solution." The University Record reported yesterday See LIGHTS, Page 2 Balloons with a message - Miriam Gershaw from SAPAC blows up balloons in the Fishbowl as a part of Sexual Assault Awareness Week. SAPAC is hosting a speakout for survivors of sexual assault tomorrow in the Union. , MSA extends filing deadline by Christine Kloostra Daily MSA Reporter The deadline for filing for candi- dacy in the fall Michigan Student Assembly election has been ex- tended to this Friday at noon. Originally set for today at 5 p.m., Election Director Catherine Fugate extended the deadline because in- formation in candidate packets defining the requirements for filing as a party was incorrect. A change in MSA's Compiled Code, requiring a party to have at least five candidates from three schools, was not included in the 4 packets. Chapter 14 of the code originally defined a party as "three or more candidates representing two or more different schools who are running together using the same identifying party name on the ballot." Prior 'to last winter term's elec- tions, the code was changed, said Rebecca Gebbes, who served as election director last winter. How- ever, the information in the candi- date packets last winter and this fall was not changed, and the mistake was not discovered until yesterday. Elections, to be held Nov. 14 and 15, will fill twenty-two seats on the assembly. Fugate extended the deadline out of fairness for those who had re- ceived incorrect packets. Fugate has also announced polling sites and has maintained the same number of polling hours as last winter. Nursing, Art and Architecture, and Pharmacy polling sites have been eliminated because those seats are not up for election this semester, Fugate said. A polling site at the School of Public Health will be added for the fall. Israelis restrict entry to Jerusalem, JERUSALEM (AP) - Israeli forces blocked Palestinians from en- tering Jerusalem yesterday to prevent clashes following the murders of three Jews by a knife-wielding Arab. A Palestinian teen-ager was killed and 19 others were hospitalized with wounds suffered in clashes with Is- raeli troops yesterday throughout the occupied West Bank, said Arab re- ports. Jews angered by Sunday's killings threw stones at Arab cars and beat several Arab pedestrians, said Israel radio. It blamed members of the anti-Arab Kach Party, saying they were bent on inciting trouble. After the violence, national po- lice headquarters announced that the ban on Palestinians entering Jerusalem would continue for at least a second day today "in view of the present tension in the city." The blockade does not affect the 140,000 Palestinians living in Jerusalem, but does apply to the thousands who come from the West Bank and Gaza Strip to work in the city. Police spokesperson Ron Yishayahu said that in addition to a "massive deployment of police forces" in Jerusalem, night patrols by police and paramilitary troops would be stepped up. Members of the Women's Action for Nuclear Disarmament group rally yesterday for the ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban treaty by the U.S. Senate. WAND demonstrators call for farewell to nuclear arms Campus groups pursue Spike Lee for V'U'Visit by Jay Garcia Berstein would not say how Two University groups are work- ing to bring actor, filmmaker and di- rector Spike Lee to the University campus this spring. Viewpoint, a division of the University Activities Center which usually arranges two speaking en- gagements a year, has made several much money UAC offered Lee, but estimated that booking him could cost around $13,000. "One object I have is to move Viewpoint toward the edge," he said. Already booked for the upcoming months are Dr. Jean Kilbourne, a womens' rights activist who will by Jon Rosenthal A collander and a honey jar full of bee bees were used to demon- strate the size of the world's nuclear arsenal yesterday as part of a rally against nuclear testing by the Women's Action for Nuclear Disar- mament (WAND) group. The bee bee demonstration "gives you an idea how many nu- clear weapons there are in the The ralliers marched to the Fed- eral Building where they heard speakers talk about the problems and dangers inherent in the testing and production of nuclear weapons. "The earth is getting really. knocked around by it," said Dalynn Park, a member of Washtenaw County WAND and the area repre- sentative for American Peace Test. She was referring to a study of the The speakers came from a vari- ety of socially concerned organiza- tions. "I feel like all of these issues are connected. The bottom line for ev- ery social cause is money," said Larry Fox, of the Homeless Action Committee. "All the U.S. resources" not all but too much of it, is being put into the military and into nu- clear weapons. Which we all hope will never be used. So, it's an end-