Niety-iveyg anrs oe fieel Ninety-five years of editorial freedom Vol. XCV, No. 12-S Cspysight 1985 Wednesday, June 5, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Alpha House opens for adolescent addicts By NADINE LAVAGNINO David finally learned to cry. The 14-year-old always had trouble talking about his anger, his frustrations, and his time spent in juvenile detention. He could not face responsibility or admit that he had a problem: David is chemically dependent on acid and alcohol, but now he has taken the most important step in his life. DAVID is one of nine male teenagers in a new program for chemically dependent adolescents at the Ann Arbor Alpha House. As the only program in the state for such teens, the Alpha House offers a new beginning toward a chemically-free life. The house provides counseling and support, plus a two-year aftercare program for alcoholics and drug addicts. A long Senate turns dow defense budget ci 'It was a big step, my admitting I was dependent. I didn't accept it until now.' - Mickey Alpha House resident term extensive facility is necessary because "a short-term program is not enough," according to Neil Carolan, director of the Catherine McAuley Chemical Dependency Services in Washtenaw County. The Alpha House program was founded with the philosophy that chemical dependency is a disease that can be treated by responsible action on the individual's part. THE HOUSE sits off the road in a wooded area on the south- west part of Ann Arbor, next to Mercywood Hospital. Both facilities are part of the Catherine McAuley Health Center. The 16-bed facility, open to males and females betweenthe ages of 13 and 17, is designed for complete recovery. A unique service at the Alpha House is its school curriculum usually not available ina short-term dependency program. Individuals admitted to the home for six months are usually cross addicted, according to Alpha House Director Tommie Edwards, and have suffered numerous harmful consequences and behavioral disruptions because of their alcohol and drug See LONG-TERM. Page 4 WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate rejected one Democratic effort yesterday to sharply restrict President Reagan's "Star Wars" missile defense plan and moved on to consider other attempts to slice the research program's bankroll. agreement" to cut the superpowers' nuclear arsenals. IT WOULD be "mindless for the Soviets to give up" some strategic forces while the United States worked on technology that could render their remaining missiles useless, Kerry The Senate voted 78-21 against a bid maintained. by Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass) to I reduce by more than half-from $2.95 Sen. John Warner (R-Va.) arguing 1 billion to $1.4 billion-spending for thIe against Kerry, said the amendment program in the fiscal 1986 defense "would gut the SDI program." Fur- . authorization bill. Kerry's proposed ther, he said, it was Reagan's Star x spending figure is the level in the Wars plan "that brought the Soviets current fiscal year's bill. back to the table." THE SENATE then turned to the The fiscal 1986 military spending next in a long line of proposed "Star plan under debate contains $2.95 Wars" amendments, one offered by billion for Star Wars, down significan- Sens. William Proxmire (D-Wis) tly . om the $3.7 billion sought by and Dale Bumpers (D-Ark.) to pa Reagan for research and developl Photo by ASA BLOCK tespending to $1.9 billion and focus ment of a high-technology system to spdi t1rac or on 9bmore cen- k noc~ out nuclear weapons. ste to Flying high tional technologies. Reagan has said such a system, The Goodyear blimp takes a trip over Ann Arbor yesterday afternoon. The blimp was coming from Bloomfield which critics say could carry a final Hills where Oakland Hills Country Club will host the U.S. Open June 13 through 16. Kerry, who argued his amendment pricetag of $1 trillion, could be in use would eliminate work on projects that by the end of the century. could undermine the 1972 U.S.-Soviet sso wa spa f r Anti-Ballistic Missl tea, td U Before facing the Star Wars debate, OMep h SO JoS colleagues, "This is the time we must the Senate rejected, on a tie vote, a say 'no' to the president's dream, a bid by Sen. Edward Kennedy By KERY MURAKAMI of ideas on improving the assem- "I couldn't afford to be president dream based on illusion." (D-Mass.) to strip from the bill Michigan Student Assembly bly, said that students who have to if my parents couldn't put me provisions that reduced the coverage President Paul Josephson, saying work to support themselves can't through school," Josephson said, And, said Kerry, the administration of the Davis-Bacon Act on military that many students cannot afford afford to put in the 50-to-60 hours a "and there's a lot of people I know has yet to put the program-formally projects. The Depression-era law to serve on the University's aeik necessary ob an officer or who would be great officers or known as the Strategic Defense requires the prevailing area wage, student government, says that he AS A result, Josephson says that chairmen, but just can't swing it Initiative-on the bargaining table at usually a union wage, be paid on will propose a salary of about $30 a the assembly is becoming "an in- financially." Geneva arms talks and, as long as federally financed construction week for its executive officers and stitution of the financially well- Josephson, an LSA junior, added that is the case, "you cannot get an projects. committee chairmen. off." of thA Page w Josephson, in the latestof a series - Galluping Boppin' Taxing A stroll through Ann Arbor's parks. Chance of early showers but a high of Reagan's proposal will hurt athletes. Opinion, Page 5 75. Sports, Page 8