b Mirbigau 1 Iai g Ninety-four years of editorial freedom The chigaDaily Ann Arbor, Michigan -Tuesday, June 19, 1984 T .Mkh .g.O _1ia , Fifteen Cents Sixteen Pages Bus stop A passerby examines an Ann Arbor Transportation Authority bus on the corner of Main and Washington Sts. yesterday after it ran off the road to avoid a car which had run a red light while going west on Washington. The driver of the car, who was slightly injured, received a moving violation. 'U sends $8.3 million to fix fktws in new hospital Guardian Angels plan city, campus patrols By LISA POWERS Ann Arbor may soon have divine in- tervention in the fight against crime, the leader of the Guardian Angels said this week. Curtis Sliwa said he hopes to establish an Angels chapter here sometime in the fall. Sliwa will visit Detroit and Ann Arbor next month to lay the groundwork for a "satellite" group of the Detroit chap- ter, which has been in existence for almost three years. "THERE'S ALWAYS been an in- terest to get established in Ann Arbor," Sliwa said, citing the well-publicized student unrest of the 60s, the city's crime rate, and Ann Arbor's proximity to Detroit. While Sliwa is here he said he will meet with city and University officials and community groups to gather sup- port and explain the Angels' program which consists of night patrols by group members trained in self-defense who attempt to deter crime and make citizen's arrests when necessary. The Guardian Angels have met a great deal of opposition when trying to start chapters in other cities, and much of this opposition has come from law enforcement agencies who see the Angels as a vigilante group. BOTH ANN ARBOR Police Executive Major Walter Hawkins and University Director of Public Safety Walt Stevens said they knew nothing about Sliwa's plans and refused to speculate on whether the group would be welcome here. Scott Page, president of the Michigan Student Assembly, said he has been See GUARDIAN, Page 4 By ANDREW ERIKSEN Because of a construction procedure designed to save time and money, the University regents last week were for- ced to authorize the spending of $8.3 million to correct problems in the con- struction of the University's Replacement Hospital Project. The money comes from a reserve fund within the project's budget, and University officials stressed yesterday that the overall cost of the project will not increase. Inside: " The Peace Corps is returning to Ann Arbor to recruit a few good farmers. See Page 3. " The Reagan administration should take another look at aid to Argentina. See Opinion, Page 6. * Eric Turner and Tim McCor- mick are among the many college players awaiting the up- coming NBA draft. See Sports, Page 10. Outside: Sunny and less humid with a high in the low 80s. With this issue the Daily enters its finals week hibernation. The next issue will appear on July 6. "WE'RE NOT over budget," said University controller Chandler Mat- thews. The $8.3 million was shifted from a reserve fund that had accumulated when other hospital contracts were finished under budget. "The University has been working on this cost shift since February," said James Brinkerhoff, vice president in charge of financial affairs. THE RESERVE fund had $24 million at one point, but the fund will now dwin- dle to a few hundred thousand dollars. "We told them to keep the reserve available for project funding," said Roger Boe, project director for the ar- chitectural firm of Albert Kahn Associates, Inc. "(The University) choseto assign it to other projects." The $285 million Hospital Replacement Project, which is the largest health care facility to be sup- ported by the state, will provide teaching, research, and patient care facilities. THE UNIVERSITY is using a con- See 'U', Page5 EXISTING INDUSTRIES MUST SURVIVE: Economists predict state's future By PETE WILLIAMS Last in a three-part series High-tech is a great political catch phrase these days in Michigan. In the state's tough economic times, Michigan's politicians and economists have looked at high-tech industries with eager eyes, hoping the com- puter-related fields can fliI TECH provide the panacea for surging unemployment rates, The way of the future? dusrxes and crippled in- But there are those who argue that the men and women in Lansing may be wasting their energy trying to make Michigan the high technology capital of the nation. According to one consultant, the unemployment problem will bot be solved by recruiting high-tech industries. "Someone who has been working on the line at GM cannot just jump right into a job in applied research or applied technology," said Ann Rhodes of Public Sector Consultants. Rhodes said that the relatively small number of potential jobs offered in high-tech industry will be geared toward those already educated in technical fields. And for Michigan's large population of unemployed, unskilled workers, high-tech development does not appear to be a promising alternative. "IF YOU THINK of high-tech as the savior of the future, you have to realize that it will only be for those who can take part-and that's not everybody," Rhodes said. She added that developing high-tech industry in the state would not be done quickly and that Michigan is not concen- trating enough on more immediate solutions to its economic problems. "A lot of people just want to muddle through these tough times, and some of them are just jumping on the high- tech bandwagon," she said. See ECONOMISTS, Page 14