The Michigan Daily-Saturday, May 22, 1982-Page 3 Regents approve study of Econ. move to Lorch Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS SIDNEY LENS, editor of the Progressive magazine, discusses the recent growth of the nuclear freeze movement. Lens.is attending this weekend's disarmament conference at Rackham. Nuclear freeze drive Sge w ra~w a I S By SCOTT STUCKAL The current nuclear freeze movement will become as broad and comprehensive as the anti-military movement of the Vietnam war era, predicts Sidney, Lens, senior editor of the Progressive magazine. Lens, who is on campus to participate in this weekend's Nuclear Disar- mament conference at Rackham Auditorium, said freeze supporters in- clude "a coagulation of both people in- terested in controlling the arms race and people being hurt by social (program) cuts." LENS ALSO said the military resear- ch currently being conducted on cam- pus is "an abomination and a disgrace to the University." Student involvement, however, in ef- forts to stop the nuclear arms race has not reached its peak, he said. "When young people are involved, the movement will grow like prairie fire." Lens advocates total disarmament of U.S. and Soviet nuclear weapons, which he said would require "some form of world government." "You have to have disarmament or the world's going to blow up," he said. Lens described the Progressive as a magazine attempting to expose hypocrisy and secrecy in government. In 1979, the magazine went to court when the government prevented its publication of detailed plans of how to build a hydrogen bomb. A Wisconsin judge ruled against the Progressive, but the decision later was nullified when another publication ran a similar article while the case was on appeal. "We were trying to show the ridiculousness of secrecy," Lens said of the case. Lens will speak today at Rackham on new directions for the arms movement. University Physics Prof. Daniel Axelrod also will lecture on building an arms freeze coalition. By BILL SPINDLE The University Regents approved a study yesterday that will examine the cost of using Lorch Hall as a new home for the economics department. University Vice President and Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff said during the Regents monthly meeting that Lorch Hall "appears" to offer the best facilities for the economics department's relocation. The department's original home, the Economics building, was destroyed by fire last December. LORCH HALL. however, will require "extensive" renovations before it will be ready to house the department, Brinkerhoff said. The cost of the renovation project, estimates at $2 million, will be covered by the Univer- sity's insurance settlement, he added. Brinkerhoff said the smaller units occupying Lorch would be relocated to other campus buildings. University of- ficials already have proposed moving the University's gerontology unit from Lorch to Old St. Joseph's Hospital, currently the temporary home of the economics department. During Thursday's meeting, held at the University's Dearborn campus, Regents received a progress report on the Medical School's medical service plan, implemented in 1974. THE PLAN, called one of the most significant events of the last decade (in the Medical School)" by Dean John Gronvall, features a new method of distributing income from patient ser- vices. Under the plan, patient fees are divided between physicians and the University. The Regents reacted positively to the report, although some expressed con- cern over the plan's ability to control patient costs. "It really is the policy of this board to control (costs)," said Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor). The Regents also heard protests con- cerning the elimination of synchronized swimming from the varsity sport program. Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) said yesterday that the matter "should be looked at again." State cuts undermining 'U' says Shapiro By BILL SPINDLE The state's higher education system may crumble if cutbacks in state aid continue, University President Harold Shapiro said yesterday in a statement to the Regents. The statement came in the wake of a $1.3 million state aid cut to the Univer- sity, announced Thursday by Gov. William Milliken. It was the third such cut leveled at the University in the state's last fiscal year. "WE CANNOT allow this deterioration to continue or we shall see higher education crumble," Shapiro told the Regents. Shapiro blamed the reductions on See MORE, Page 10 Kennedy assassin Sirhan denied parole SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)- Californai's parole board yesterday canceled the scheduled 1984 parole date of Sirhan Sirhan, the convicted assassin of Robert Kennedy. The board of Prison Terms, denying that it was yielding to public outcry, said evidence presented at extraor- dinary hearings showed Sirhan has made continuing threats of violence and murder, and probably was scheduled for parole by mistake in the first place. THE PROSECUTOR who fought to keep Sirhan in prison said the nation "could breathe a sigh of relief that Sirhan will remain in prison." Sirhan's attorney, who broke the news to the convict by a telephone call to Soledad Prison, said the 38-year-old Jordanian immigrant was "despon- dent," but that he had expected the decision. "Let's face it," said attorney Luke McKissack, "he's a despised person." GEORGE MEHDI, president of the American-Arab Relations Committee who has supported Sirhan's parole, said in New York he was "shocked and ex-, ceptionally disappointed ... Sirhan now is a completely different person than the Sirhan of 1968." Under the glare of television lights in the state Capitol, board chairman Ray Brown read a statement announcing: "The Sept. 1, 1984, parole date of Sirhan Sirhan is hereby rescinded for good cause." Brown said the board would hold another hearing in six months to con- sider setting a new date for Sirhan's release. THE BOARD had been under strong public pressure to rescind the parole date, which was set by an earlier board in 1975. But board members specifically denied that public opposition was the chief influence on their decision, which had been requested by Los Angeles County District Attorney John Van de Kamp. "These are factual issues," Brown said. "Public outcry was not an issue." He added, "The factual issues in this case did not involve an election." He apparently was referring to allegations that Van de Kamp, who is running for state attorney general, had used the Sirhan case in his campaign. BROWN SAID the three-member panel believed that the board that originally decided in 1975 to release Sirhan was unaware of violent threats he has made while in prison. Brown cited Sirhan's written threats to kill an author who wrote a book about him, a prison guard and a prison of- ficial who received a complaint from Sirhan that dentists were refusing to treat him for tooth problems. . ertan . .reported dspondent