The Michigan Daily -Friday, September 20, 1991 - Page 3 Commission to .create disability issue awareness by Elizabeth Marshall A University sign interpreter is donating her time to a city panel on 4isability issues so the committee's proceedings can reach the hearing- *mpaired. The University and the Ann Arbor Commission on Disability issues are coordinating a joint effort to create awareness of and provide for the needs of people with dis- Abilities. The commission's newest service is the appearance of a sign interpreter at its monthly meetings, * ich are broadcast on Community Access cable television. This service 4ims to accommodate all types of Disabilities of both students and Ann Arbor residents, commission staff representative William Iampton said. We are trying to be as sensitive to the eeds of as many components of the disabled community as possible' - William Hampton commission staff representative "A goal of the commission is to levelop materials and methods to increase the capability of the com- munity to function as a model for people with disabilities," Hampton said. . Joan Smith, coordinator of Services for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, a division of the University's Services for Students with Disabilities, has donated six months of appearances on the com- mission's broadcasts where she will act as an sign interpreter. Hampton said it is important that the hearing impaired are able to view the meetings and is pleased with the prospect of increasing the number of viewers and supporters of the commission's efforts. "We are trying to be as sensitive to the needs of as many components of the disabled community as possi- ble. We want to make sure that we are getting as many hearing impaired viewers as possible," he said. Hampton said in the past the University community was not well informed of the commission's services. Smith said by appearing on the Commssion's broadcasts she hopes to highlight the need for cable tele- vision to be captioned or inter- preted, and the benefit of University-city cooperation in dis- abilities services. She added that she has received many requests from University stu- dents for sign language, the third most widely. spoken language in the world, to be offered for credit to fulfill the language requirement as an alternative to a foreign language. She stressed the importance of the University's cooperation with the city in providing the signing service on cable. "The University of Michigan is a friendly campus for students with disabilities," Smith said. "We are anxious to accommodate." The University is sponsoring an "Investing in Abilities Week" October 7-11. Each day of the week will be designated to a specific ac- tivity to educate students with dis- abilities about the services available through the University. Business school junior Garrick Wang (second from right) could have filled this bus and three others with the 26,757 pounds of cardboard the University Recycling Office collected during "move-in" week. Cardboard contest winner is 654 pounds shy of perfect Regents approve 1991-92 'U' budget by Henry Goldblatt Daily Administration Reporter The University Board of Regents met for its monthly meeting yes- terday and approved the operating budget for the 1991-92 fiscal year for the University's three campuses. The budget, passed by an 8-0 margin, contains $683 million of General Fund spending for the University's three campuses. The General Fund is funded in part by student fees and state appro- priations. It pays for teaching, re- search, and scholarships. Regents and administrators ex- pressed concern that the budget was framed without a definite knowl- edge of state appropriations. Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Gilbert Whitaker said the University used an estimate of a 4.7 percent increase in state ap- propriations when drafting the bud- get. However, the University ad- ministrators said they are expecting an increase in state appropriations of slightly more than 4 percent. "Our expectation is slightly over 4 percent. There might possibly be a modest shortfall. We have se- questered enough money to take care of the shortfall," Whitaker said. "There are risk factors in several areas. The state appropriation pro- cess itself.., seems pretty much on target, a bit less than we built into the budget, but not dramatically so," said University President James Duderstadt. "The budget was presented to us in an environment where we were not clear what was going to happen with the state," said Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor). Any budget cuts will be made at the departmental level. "We believe that it is not fruitful to dictate simply how units plan... they're closer to the action. Freezes are: never the productive way to deal with this," Whitaker said. by Lauren Dermer The University Recycling Of- fice announced yesterday winners of a contest to guess the amount of cardboard collected in University Residence Halls during "move-in" week. Garrick Wang, Business School junior and East Quad resident, won the contest with his guess of 26,103 pounds of cardboard - only 654 pounds off. "I remembered from last year that we recycled about 25,000 pounds - with the University's continued emphasis on recycling, I figured it would be a greater amount this year," said Wang. The grand-prize is two tickets to tomorrow's Jesus Jones concert at Hill Auditorium, courtesy of University of Michigan Office of Special Events. The contest, sponsored by the University Recycling Office for a second year, is aimed at promoting the recycling program in the dorms. Garrick Wang, LSA junior and East Quad resident, won the contest with his guess of 26,103 pounds of cardboard - only 654 pounds off Students, the University Hous- ing Division, and the Recycling Of- fice collected 26,757 pounds of cardboard from the 15 residence halls, according to Recycling Edu- cation Assistant Jenny Cotner. This year's total was 6.5% more than the 25,118 pounds of card- board recycled last year. "I think that with each year the statistics increase because more people are interested and aware," said Cotner. Participants thought the recy- cling contest was a success. "The program really went over, well," said LSA senior Paige Davis, a student on the Markley Ecology Committee. "People were excited and there was a definite improvement in publicity from last year." "Contests like this really make people aware and they are a good way to get the point across to the people," said LSA junior and Markley resident Terri Candy. i . Bush denies rumor of impending air war Th MIHIA DAue wg ~ILY ' aaav a 'a a. waaav ! ArrL1 I .I I n23U' a . youm 764-0552 JI 1 I WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration tried to quell talk of a new war with Iraq yester- day, a day after raising the possibil- ity of sending U.S. planes to protect Y .N. inspectors. President Bush de- nied he was spoiling for a fight and *he Pentagon said, "Nobody is going anywhere."' Bush denounced Iraqi President Saddam Hussein as a "brutal dicta- tor," but only in the course of a quick reference to the Gulf War dur- ing a speech on domestic matters. The president had said Wednesday he- was "fed up" with Skddam and ready to back up his frustration by deploying U.S. air- *craft if Iraq continued to interfere with U.N. teams searching for its weapons of mass destruction. , Told that Iraq's state-run news media had accused the United States of "spreading false information ... to justify its resumption of aggres- sion," Bush told reporters in Los Angeles, "I'm not looking for a fight with anybody." Defense Department spokesper- son Pete Williams refused to com- ment on the alert status of any U.S. forces, saying the Pentagon doesn't comment on "contingency plans." Williams added, "No orders have been issued to carry out any plan with respect to an Iraqi contin- gency. ... All I can say is, there are no troops moving. Nobody is going anywhere." He did say that U.S. Patriot mis- siles will be leaving bases in Europe soon for Saudi Arabia. Williams said there was "no in- creased threat" that sparked their move. The anti-missile weapons were requested by King Fahd because the Saudis "feel threatened" by Iraq since Baghdad "continues to try to sidestep the U.N. Security Council resolutions on destroying their bal- listic missiles," Williams said. He said Iraq "has a long way to go" to meet U.N. demands for dis- closing the full range of its nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs, as well as its ballistic missiles. A team of 13 U.N. inspectors planned to go to Iraq Friday to carry on the search for biological weapons and a group of nuclear experts was ready to go over the weekend, offi- cials said. A Patriot missile unit is com- posed of 95 soldiers, but Williams did not say how many people would be going to Saudi Arabia. Nor would he say how many missiles will be sent to Saudi Arabia, when they are scheduled to depart, or how long they will re- main there. Bush made a single mention of the Iraqi situation yesterday as he attempted to switch public atten- tion to his domestic agenda. "If America can defeat a brutal dictator in a matter of weeks, then surely its legislative body can man- age to pass two bills - the admin- istration's crime and transportation bills - within 100 days," Bush said at a GOP fund-raising breakfast in Portland, Ore. At the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Dick Cheney signed the first post-Gulf War defense pact in a meeting with Kuwait's defense minister, Ali al-Sabah al-Salim al- Sabah. I iluutao V Vu 0 s v-r "Qy"bi ' -I (- ....ii /nom r "Sustainable Peace: A New World Order" 1 Groceries, Liquor, Beer, Wine & Kegs ET & 1 Corner of State & Packard' Ope tl midniht Sun-Thurs I 665-443S "'" " "" """ Seventh annual National Ecumenical Conference on the Philippines October 25-27,1991 St. Andrews Episcopal Church 306 North Division Join those concerned with human rights for all the world's people in an atmosphere of worship, international struggle, and friendship to discuss justice issues and related U.S. policy in the Philippines. Keynote Speakers Leonor Briones- President ,Freedom from Debt Coalition; Prof. of Public Adm., University of the Philippines Richard Falk- Prof . of International Law, Princeton featuring a Barrio Fiesta-Food and Fun Local Sponsors Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, U-M Ecumenical Campus Center Interfaith Center for Peace and Justice Office of Ethics and Religion, U-M Philippine-Michigan Club For further information, call 662-5529 THE LIST m__mm m 0 m m - What's happening in Ann Arbor today . ' L'i J U.A.C / C U R E E . innUAC/MINI-COURSES -rn--rn Meetings Sunday ;APO meeting. Union Ballroom, 7 p.m. Alcohol Awareness Week, informa- tional mtg. MSA Chambers, 3:30. Call 763-3241 for info. U-M Chess Club. Michigan League. Call 994-5824 for info. Student Alumni Council, member- ship mtg. Alumni Center, 4 p.m. Speakers Friday "On Logical Form," Stephen Neale of the University of California, Berkeley. 2408 Mason, 4 p.m. "Palestinians in Post-War Kuwait," Kurt Berggren. Guild House, 802 Mon- roe, noon. "Complex Polymers form Lignins," John Meister, University of Detroit. Chem Bldg, rm 1706, noon. "Processes of Fluid Flow and Fluid- rock Interaction in Crustal Hy- drothemal Systems: Insights From Transport Models of Isotopic Ex- Fhange," John Bowman, University of Utah. Chem Bldg. rm 1640.4 p.m. Furthermore Friday "Blood of Jesus" and "Dirty Gertie from Harlem," films. Angell Aud A, 7 p.m., free. "Gate of Hell," film. Lorch Hall Audi- torium, 7 p.m., free. U-M Ninjitsu -Club, every Friday. Cal] 662-2306 for info. IM wrestling room, 6:30-8. U-M Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, practice. CCRB Martial Arts Rm, 6:30-7:30. U-M Women's Lacrosse Club. Call 996-8591 for info. U-M Rowing Team, novice practice. 2:30, 3:30,4:30,5:30. International Observer, happy hour. Dominick's, 5 p.m. Saturday Drum Circle, rhythm and percussion playing. Guild House, 802 Monroe, every Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Barbara Morgan, symposium and per- formance. East Quad, 3-5, Museum of Art, 5:30. Trotter House Picnic, free. Trotter House, 1-6. Gender and Society in the Middle a The following corrections need to be made: . ON THE POSTER ONLY: classes listed for North Campus are actually ARTSPACE classes. - . ON THE POSTER ONLY: classes listed for " ARTSPACE are actually on North Campus. . IN THE DAILY AD (9/16) and THE POSTER:: .The North Campus yoga class meets at the times listed for the Central Campus class.. -The Central Campus yoga class meets at the . times listed for the North campus class. If you have QoU ESTIONS, please call U A C@7 6 3.-1 1 07 : .................................... MSA NEEDS YOU! MSA is presently taking applications for University faculty/student committees. Interested students should pick up an application in the MSA chambers, 1*- fi ri r -r A 4 A .: /T n.rn"T Tnr% Join the Undergraduate Law Club Activities include: Mock LSAT, mock trial competition, social events, attendance at U of M Law Classes, visits to Law Schools, speakers including attorneys, judges, and visiting law profes- sors, among others. Interested? FI