The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 11, 1982-Page 5 CONGRESS SHOULD OUTLA WBULLIES, TAXES Kids make legislative demands By The Associated Press WASHINGTON- Rep. Joseph McDade (R-Pa.) probably gets no more or no less mail than most of his 434 House colleagues, but some of it has been unusually demanding lately. For instance, constituent Amy Johnson suggested McDade do more for the little people. "Can you make a rule to tell the big kids on the bus to quit picking on us and quit writing on the seat?" she petitioned. Melissa Carlson, on the other hand, told her congressman: "I am worried about taxes!!! Because I cannot get any more fruit bars! I want you to do something about this!" YOU CAN'T FOOL the kids at Blossburg Elemen- tary School in Tioga County, Pa., with rhetoric and bromides. They know exactly what worries them and what they expect their elected officials to do about it. The group of 7-year-old and 8-year-old students were asked by their teachers to write McDade on the issues they felt were the most pressing. 'I am worried about taxes. I want you to lower the taxes to one hun- dred dollars.' -Benjamin Randise Elementary school student From his mailbag, here are some more of their concerns: t "My name is Benjamin Randise. .. I am worried about the taxes. I want you to lower the taxes to one hundred dollars." "MY NAME IS Juanita Seeley ... I am worried about some people wrote on the wall Monday night. Some good person called the police. I want you to stop it. Will you please try to do it." "My name is Lennie Yoder ... I am worried about the pollution and people who throw out their garbage in other people's yards. I un sick of it so please do something about it." "My name is Polly Bartlett ... I am worried about the telephone bills. Is their anything Congress can do about it please." "MY NAME IS Billie-Jo Beck . . . I am worried about people writing on the wall with paint. Will you please make a rule saying don't write on the walls?" McDade, who put some of the letters from his young correspondents in the Congressional Record, detected some significant trends developing at Blossburg Elementary. "As with all samples of opinion, some inter- pretation of responses is necessary," McDade said. "My tabulation of the problems cited is as follows: taxes, five; pollution and littering, three; prices, two; jobs, two; graffiti, two; crime, two; fires, two; bullies, one; telephone bills, one; and other, one. THEN THERE was the letter from Christine Kreger, whom McDade surely will want to cultivate as a future voter. "I am not worried about anything. I think you are doing terrific. University bids Econ. Building farewell By GREG BRUSSTAR The charred remains of the Economics Building were leveled by a demolition crew yesterday, as a small crowd of onlookers gathered to pay last respects to the University's oldest classroom building. The University decided last month that the historic building, destroyed ina Christmas Eve blaze, would be too costly to renovate to modern construc- tion standards. THE ECONOMICS department's new RAH LEWIS home will be located in Lorch Hall, Prof. Richard Porter, associate depar- tment chairman, said yesterday. The administration currently is considering worry renovating Lorch Hall or adding a new wing to accommodate the department, Porter added. i Porter expressed little sentiment flt over yesterday's demolition. "We all came to grips with that months ago," he said. The demolition went off without a hit- ch, said University Department of Safety Officer Timothy Shannon. The University currently has no plans to build anything on the site, and will con- vert it into a grassy area. The fire that destroyed the building last Christmas Eve was caused by ar- son, police say. Victor Arroyo, a former University employee, is charged with setting the fire. A hearing on the case is set for this week. The University still is negotiating an insurance settlement with Industrial Risks Insurers for money to replace the lost building, said Robert Winter, assistant director of University in- surance. Although no figure has been agreed on, Winter said he expects the University to receive between $1.5 million and $2 million to renovate Lorch oversy Hall for the economics department. dS Doily Photo by DEBOF Standing room only Workers buildinga bridge over the Huron River stand on steel rods that will be used to reinforce concrete. Don't though, they're only five feet off the ground. ABC wins mllion-dolar libel s CLEVELAND, (AP) - A jury yesterday ruled in favor of ABC-TV ina multimillion-dollar libel suit brought by a woman who contended she was defamed in a broadcast of the net- work's "20-20" program. The jury sat through 25 days of testimony in the trial, which began March 22 in U.S. Dictrict Court. The civil suit by Sandra Boddie, 31, of Akron was the first of three filed against ABC for the segment "Injustice For All," which was broadcast April 17, 1980. THE JURY OF four women and two men had begun deliberating earlier yesterday whether ABC-TV and repor- ter Geraldo Rivera libeled and invaded the woman's privacy. Rivera called the trial "one of the most depressing and negative aspects of my entire professional life." Ms. Boddie, a welfare mother of four, contended the program depicted her as a prostitute who had sex with a judge in exchange for a lighter prison sentence on a theft charge. SHE ALSO argued that her privacy was invaded when Rivera, producer Charles Thompson and a third reporter used a hidden camera and microphone during an interview in her home in March 1980. Ms. Boddie had sought $1 million in compensatory damages. Her lawyer, Jane Sirak, had asked the jury to con- sider ABC's 1980 net worth of $870 million in determining punitive damages. The original suit, filed May 1, 1980, sought $20 million in compen- satory damages and $2 million in punitive damages. ABC denied it called Ms. Boddie a prostitute or that it implied she had sex with the judge. Rivera testified the program showed her as someone who asked a friend to intercede for her with the judge. Rirera ... caught in '20-20' contr