The Michigan Daily-Thursday, August 6, 1981-Page 3 RESTA URANT, GALLERY MAY BE INCLUDED Women plan to open new center By ANN MARIE FAZIO Daily staff writer Several Ann Arbor women have announced plans to open a new women's center in the city which would include a restaurant, art gallery, retail stores, and meeting halls. The women, who said the plans are still in the early stages, said their goal is to create a "center for all women" to meet and share their ideas in a supportive and encouraging atmosphere. They said they hope to complete the center within a year and a half. SUSAN EDWARDS, a 40-year-old Ann Arbor resident of 20 years, is leading a group of women in developing ideas for the proposed Women's Center. "Supporting women's growth," will be the center's main function, Edwards said, "providing what doesn't already exist." It would include space in, which women could hold workshops and "share creative efforts," she said. The idea is still "in the planning and research phase," Edwards said, but the idea has been around the community for a long time. She added that most other major college campuses have this type of cen- ter. SHE EXPLAINED that the group is "working on a process, rather than an end product" at this stage, and added that the center is intended to be a "com- munity project" for women to get involved in. Being involved means participating in all aspects of planning its opening, she said, including designing, financing, promoting, and operating. The group will train women in areas with which they are unfamiliar, she added. They want to "support women who are trying out new things in their lives," she said. The organizing committee working on the idea has nearly 20 members and "keeps growing every week," Edwards said. One of the most important functions of the group is to go out to women's groups in the community to determine the needs of Ann Ar- bor women, she said. RESEARCH questionnaries were sent out late last winter to help assess those needs. From the cir- culation of the questionnaires, the project gained publicity and support and grew in number, she said. She said she is not sure how the project will be financed. The group might sell memberships, as co- ops do, offering discounts for members. They will also solicit donations and hold fundraisers. The center will not exclude men, Edwards said, but some of the areas will be geared more toward women's interests. She said they have received ad- vice and help from many men who have been "very supportive." r? Reagan administration proposes loosening of environmental laws From APandUPI WASHINGTON - The Reagan ad- ministration yesterday proposed a lowering of pollution standards for cars and a loosening of environmental laws - actions it acknowledged would slow the pace of cleaning up the nation's air. The proposal was among "basic prin- ciples" approved by President Reagan for working with Congress on rewriting the 1970 Clean Air Act. ENVIRONMENTAL Protection Ad- ministrator Anne Gorsuch introduced the administration's "broad prin- ciples" for amending the Clean Air Act, the principal law controlling air pollution. She said President Reagan and his Cabinet approved the ideas Tuesday. Along with changing standards for auto pollution, the proposals would alter the rules for new coal-fired plants,. do away with clean air deadlines for some areas of the country, and give in- dividual states more say in setting their. pollution standards. Among the goals Gorsuch outlined at a news conference were- "uniformity and . . . simplification" of standards to avoid delays and help industrial development, contrasting this with the current "vegetable soup" - or case-by- case approach - in the current law. "THE AIR WILL continue to improve under the broad principles that we have adopted," Gorsuch said. However, when asked if the im- provement would be slower than under the act's current provisions, she replied: "At a more reasoned pace, yes." The proposals represent somewhat less of a rollback of environmental standards than was indicated in some early administration draft proposals leaked to Congress. BUT THE principles outlined yester- day brought renewed criticism from environmentalists. "They are still talking about changes that are extremely basic and sweeping," said Richard Ayres, chair- man of the National Clean Air Coalition. Such changes are "the blueprint for destruction of the Clean Air Act," he added. Jerry Jasinowski, chief economist for the National Association of Manufac- turers, said he welcomed the "statement of principles." He added he was concerned about- the lack of specifics but expected the ad- ministration to work with Congress to define individual recommendations. Mrs. Gorsuch said the administration would probably recommend raising standards for autos from 3.4 to 7 grams per mile of carbon monoxide and from 1 to 2 grams per mile of nitrogen oxides. The change for nitrogen oxides would save consumers $1 billion annually, or $100 per car, she said. Daily Photo by KIM HILL Summer thirst This little girl struggles to get a cool drink, but opts for a shower instead at the drinking fountain at Summit Park. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Report shows, Chicago mayor paid camp aign * funds to family CHICAGO (AP)-Mayor Jane Byrne spent $1.6 million in campaign funds in the past year-including $101,000 that went to her immediate family-though she faced no political challenger, her spending report says. According to the report, the mayor, who will not face re-election until 1983, spent 48 times as much campaign money from July 1, 1980, through June 31 as the late Mayor Richard J. Daley spent in 1976, the year before his death. SHE PAID HER husband, Jay McMullen, $74,000 for political advice. This is more than the mayor's salary of $60,000 a year and the governor's pay of $58,000. The mayor also spent $106,000 on travel, including more than $50,000 for a two-week trip to Europe last August and September by Mrs. Byrne, her family and a 3-member entourage of top city aides and legislators and their spouses. She gave away $109,147 of her campaign money to charity. MRS. BYRNE ALSO paid her daughter, Kathy, $11,784 for "salary" and "outside services" perfor- med fo'r the campaign committee, the report said. She gave her sister, Carol Sexton of suburban Wilmette, a $15,000 salary for political work. The details of the mayor's campaign spending were revealed in a report made public Tuesday by the Cook County clerk's office. State law requires can- didates to file periodic disclosure reports of their campaign spending. The recent report and others filed by the mayor showed that Mrs. Byrne, who spent only $125,000 to win her February 1979 primary upset over then- Mayor Michael Bilandic, has run through more than $3 million in campaign money since she took office. " ' _ Yi5 .. .r y v 'i iC"}¢ h. 3 . .." . ... +;t :: 4v.:.".} .? . .4vv }ti S .. f 4 w r. . . . . ' 1 i ra. .. ¢ ~. x 4 e s y' p ':