SUMMER WEEKLY . WN Midtgantail One hundred three years of editorial freedom S A Ag n J @1994 The Michigan Daily Roach must give LI papers, judge says City blasts 'U' office purchase *Ronnie Glassberg ALLY NEWS EDITOR The six-year court battle over the Jniversity Board of Regents' presi- ential search, which selected James J. )uderstadt, may have entered its final hapter. Last Wednesday Washtenaw ounty Circuit Judge Patrick Conlin rdered Thomas Roach, a regent at the ' of the search, to surrender four ocumentsfromthepresidentialsearch the Detroit Free Press and Booth{ Jewspapers, which owns The Ann trbor News. The ruling stems from the regents' 988 presidential search, in which the ewspapers sued the University for iolating the state's Open Meetings ~ct. In March, the regents agreed to turn * their papers to the newspapers, fter losing an appeal to the Michigan upreme Court. Roach, however, in- ependently decided not to turn over aur of his documents. "He was acting inan officialcapac- Ly. He has, in our view, official Pu osradKr adnrwr sr the Free Press. "He held that they 1 1 ~ ecords," said Herschel Fink, attorney Aft fa Lr1Iake rere his records. The court ruled that * were not." By Beth Harris Roach said Monday he does not DAILY STAFF REPORTER now whether he will appeal the rul- Crowds will take over the streets of ag. He said the papers that he refused Ann Arbor today, blocking students turn over were personal notes on the rushing to class and taking every last andidates to help him select the presi- parking spot. ent. It's time for the Ann Arbor Art Fair, "These papers were not things that the largest fair in the nation. ere communicated to the regents. As L"We have over 1,000 artists at the ar as I'm concerned, those were not a fairs. It is by far the largest in the art of the public record," he said. "The nation,"said Susan Froelich, coordina- ers that I did turn over dealt with tor of the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, iings like what the different advisory which is held on South University. ommittees' input was into the pro- The whole event, frequently referred ess." to as the Ann Arbor Art Fair, is actually Ed Petykiewicz, editor of The Ann three concurrent art fairs that attract up .rbor News, said he does not know to 500,000 visitors. hat information Roach's papers will The Ann Arbor Street Art Fair is the veal about the search. original of the three fairs and is cel- "I think it's important that the Su- ebrating its 35th year. The other two reme Court's decision be upheld and fairs are the State Street Art Fair on public records are given to the State Street and the Summer Art Fair u lic," he said. held on Main Street. On Sept. 28, 1993 the court ruled 4- "The oldest of the three fairs, the that the University violated the state Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, is the small-. See ROACH, Page 2 est and most intimate, but also has -In ::.. .: . { By James M. Nash DAILY EDITOR IN CHIEF With its latest property purchase last Thursday - a corporate office for $7.65 million - the University struck another blow to Ann Arbor's fragile tax base, city leaders charged. The purchase of the Eisenhower Corporate Park West office will de- prive the city of $37,700 a year in tax revenues by removing the South In- dustrial Street property from the tax rolls. University property is tax ex- empt. Universityofficialsaccusedthecity of viewing the purchase in the narrow- est of terms, ignoring the economic windfall the University provides. The purchase sparked the latest flare-up in a long-running debate over whether the University's appetite for property is taking a bite out of taxpay- ers' pockets.Thetwosidesalsodispute whether the University is obligated to informthecityofprojects,programsor other initiatives that could affect the surrounding community. "It is apparent that the University does not consider the impact of its actions on the city of Ann Arbor indi- cating a lack of corporate/social re- sponsibility to this community," City Administrator Alfred Gatta told City Council members upon learning of last Thursday's purchase. Gatta's comments drew the ire of University spokesperson Lisa Baker, who responded: "I very much disagree with his assertion that we lack corpo- rate and social responsibility to the community. There's all sorts of evi- dence to the contrary. That's all I have to say about that." The building purchase was ap- provedlastThursday by the University BoardofRegentsoverobjectionsfrom Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor). He labeled the purchase price "exces- sive." City assessment records peg the property at $4.48 million, although the University's own assessor claims the value as $7.15 million. Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Farris W. Womack said the University will recoup the dif- ference between the assessment and purchase price with a year's rent from non-University tenants. The 73,300-square-foot Eisen- hower building was owned by a Romulus-basedcorporationandleased to seven tenants, including three Uni- versity Hospitals departments. Womack said the purchase will help reducethe University'slease bill,which reached $511,000 last month. See CrrY, Page 2 DOUGLAS KANTER/Das#y esterday to prepare art fair booths, s over streets unfailing reputation for high-quality artists in a variety of media, from all over the United States," Froelich said. Whether looking for a painting or a sculpture, a sketching or handmade jewelry, the best thing to remember at the fair is to be patient. "There are several thousands of people here for the fair. In addition to the normal demand for parking, the fair causes some big parking problems," said Jack Donaldson, director of the Building Department for Ann Arbor. Students should exercise patience as well, because getting around cam- pus during the fair can be difficult. "It's annoying. There are all these people, the streets are shut off and stuff - it's a pain," said LSA first-year student Sandy Chu. Donaldson advises visitors to take advantage of the park-and-ride shuttles available through the Ann ArborTrans- portation Authority. Shuttles to the fair run from Seer' FaPage 2 Band director Revelli dies By Frank C. Lee DAILY STAFF REPORTER Renowned University of Michigan Marching Band director emeritus, Wil- liam D. Revelli, died Saturday night of heart failure at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital. He was 92. For 37 years, Revelli had directed the University's bands, during which the marching band gained international recognition. The University's band building-Revelli Hall-was named in his honor in 1973. LSA senior Rick Lowe played oc- casionally under Revelli's direction during his four years in the University marching band. "I felt like I was truly in the pres- ence of greatness, not just in terms of his bandmanship, but really his kind- ness and caring," said Lowe, the presi- dent of Kappa Kappa Psi, a national honorary band fraternity. "He really was a living legend. "Hewasincompletecontrol,"Lowe said. "He would really elicita response from a band that was unmatched ...>< He wouldn't take anythingbutexcel- lence because he knew he could get " . it from people he was directing." Born in Colo- rado on Feb. 12, 1902, Revelli was Revelli affectionately re- ferred to as "The Chief' by band mem- bers: He retired from his post in 1972. But Revelli continued to accept nearly 100 engagements as clinician, adviser, lecturer and guest conductor to bands worldwide. "He was a treasure to be around," See REVELLI, Page 2