i DECLINING BLACK ENROLLMENT See Editorial Page I Sic iau 1E~ai1F ENCORE High-mid 20s Low-upper teens See Today for details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 71 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, December 2, 1978 Ten Cents Ten Pages Student gets 'D' in class -sues 'U'for $885,000 By JOHN SINKEVICS Claiming he received "shabby treatment" from University officials and faculty members, a former University student is suing the University Regents for $885,000 because the German department did not give him an "A in a fourth term language course. 4 The case, which is the third suit initiated by the student against the University, was filed in the Michigan State Court of Claims by Bob Higgins, who received a "D" in German 232 in spring term 1976. Higgins said he accepted the grade so that he could graduate, and later took actions against the University to have it changed. "THE PROFESSORS use grades as a club. Since they (the faculty members in the German department) couldn't believe that I, a black student, was doing superior work in the course, they resented it and gave me a poor grade," said the 31-year-old Higgins. "I was planning on going on to graduate school in German studies, but I don't have a chance with that grade," he added. Higgins' complaint focuses on a class he said he set up with Assistant Professor Irma Sklenar on a one-to-one basis, after he successfully completed third term German with a "B-" grade. He explained that due to "personal emergency" reasons he was not able to attend Sklenar's course until two weeks before it was over, and then decided to take an "in- complete." HIGGINS SAID HE then handed in the necessary work (the course required four papers), within the time period required for making up the grade. He claimed that Sklenar refused to grade his papers, because she did not agree with the views expressed in them, and that a subsequent appeal to department Chairman Claiborne Thompson failed to produce results. Eventually, he asked the department to give him at least a "D" so that he could pass the course and receive his degree from the University, he said. The department agreed and although the Office of the Registrar has no record of his graduating, Higgins claims he received his diploma in August of 1976. Higgins, who runs his own foreign investment counseling firm, said it was after he graduated that he began appeal procedures with the University to change the grade he received in German. "Everybody I talked to was a phoney and they refused to allow me a hearing," said Higgins. "I IRKED THEM (the University officials) because I wasn't going to kiss their ass," said Higgins. "The people in the German department set themselves up as petty tyrants who you're supposed to agree with. So, since all the others (students) are on their knees, they figure blacks should be on their bellies." According to University counsel Roderick Daane, the complaint which Higgins filed against the University in- dicates that Higgins himself failed to call for a hearing on the subject, because many officials told him it would be a waste of time. It was after Higgins failed to get results through University channels that he decided to file suit against the University. The five Germanic Languages department faculty mem- bers who are involved in the controversy-Assistant Professor Irma Sklener, Professor Mary Crichton, former teaching assistant Ellen Fosheim, Professor Roy Cown, and department chairman Claiborne Thompson-are reluctant to discuss Higgins' suit. See STUDENT, Page 10 Shah's troops open fire on protestors Daily Photo by WAYNE CABLE with finals a mere two weeks away, freshmen Mark Canvasser, Jim Rezinkoff, Scott Florence, and snowman named St. Francis hope prayers will help bring some good fortune in their math struggles. The sculpture, kneeling next to the Grad Library and facing Mason Hall, was created by South Quad freshpersons Bonnie Brooks and Steve Cole. 300 CITY WORKERS MAY LOSE JOBS: TEHRAN, Iran ( UPI) - Gover- nment troops firing machine guns for more than three hours crushed a demonstration last night by thousands of Moslem mourners, many of them wrapped in white shrouds, who poured into the streets in suicidal defiance of the military curfew gripping Iran. The Moslems streamed into the streets shouting, "Death to the shah!" and "Allah Akbar!" "God is great!" i only hours after Ayatollah Rochollah Khomeini, the shah's archenemy, called on his Moslem followers to "sacrifice your blood to overthrow the tyrant." FIRST REPORTS from the provinces said military authorities in other towns had similar trouble with masses of people who came out in the streets in a mass rejection of the military's ban on all religious demonstrations even during curfew-free daytime hours. battle leaders would protest the plan in a meeting with Carter soon. Labor Department officials and their allies among Carter's domestic ad- visers have accepted some cuts but are appealing most to the OMB and will ask Carter to opt for smaller cuts. CARTER HAS ordered sharp federal spending cuts in his fiscal 1980 budget to combat inflation, his top domestic priority for the coming year. The 1980 fiscal budget year begins next Oct. 1. The President is committed to ex- See CETA, Page 2 Casualties in the encounter - the bloodiest yet in a year of violent op- position to the regime of Shah Moham- mad Reza Pahlavi - were not known. Yesterday's shooting, the most widespread and protracted single in- cident in Iran's wave of violence, struck terror in the capital's 4.5 million residents who had feared the beginning of the Moharram mourning period but "not quite expected it will break out on such a frightening scale," residents said. SEVERAL reliable sources said government troops recently uncovered a cache of Russian-made assault rifles in Tabriz, a city in northwestern Iran that has been the scene, of anti-shah riotsfor 11 months. This followed government reports that handguns, grenades and am- munition were found in the city of Mashhad and other weapons found in the capital. Conservative religious leaders have spearheaded the movement against the 59-year-old shah because they oppose his Western-style reforms. They have been joined by the shah's political op- position, who find fault with his authoritarian one-man rule. ) YESTERDAY'S outbreak began at 9:04 p.m., 12:04 p.m. EST, when the fir- st rifle shots were heard in the upper fringe of downtown Tehran, near the Eshratabad military base. Gunfire was still audible at 12:30 a.m. Saturday, 3:30 p.m. EST, yesterday. Later, with the rebellion crushed for the time being, the army sent tanks rumbling through the streets filled with an eerie silence. Dissident sources conceded yester- day that if the army can maintain a semblance' of order-during the first, three weeks of Moharram "the shah will probably be home free and through the crisis." CETA WASHINGTON (AP) - The Labor Department, backed by allies in the White House, is battling to stop President Carter's budget planners from slashing the huge Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) public jobs program by nearly 60 per cent in the 1980 budget. According to a document obtained by The Associated Press, Carter's budget managers are seeking to eliminate 358,000 adult jobs from the CETA programs at the same time that they have raised their forecast for unem- playment in 1979. THE LABOR Department document also indicates that the budget agency, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), wants to cut 500,000 summer youth jobs and 11,0000 youth training slots. Ann Arbor CETA official Tim.Mc- Daniel said it is too early to predict specifically the effect of the program cuts on the national leve. McDaniel said if the cuts are made they will be taken from some nine individual titles. He also said he was unsure whether Title VI, which is the local program's main funding source, would be cut. Currently, 300 persons are employed by the CETA program - a payroll which stretches to 1,000 persons during the summer. McDaniel said the city's relatively low unemployment rate, four jobcu r cent, would definitely be a c eration in funding reduction, caus rmination or cutting of salaries me Ann Arbor city employees. I niel added he would be able to m curate predictions on specific Ic fects in January. LABOR, BLACK and urban gro ound the country expressed disn id anger yesterday upon learnin e proposal. 'ETA funds are used to pay caries of up to one third of some c rk forces. it sparksJ Ann Arbor received a $425,000 reim- bursement from the federal gover- nment this year, of the total $23 million budget. "CITIES ARE shocked and dis- mayed; a lot would have to lay off signi- ficant numbers of workers serving people," said Michael McPherson of the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Carl Holman, president of the Urban Coalition, said, "That would be very dangerous with the looming possibility of a recession. They're not talking about the real world." He said 16 black Stevens named safety' director By STEVE HOOK Walter Stevens has been chosen to succeed the late Fredrick Davids as director of safety, the University announced Thursday. Stevens was appointed by the University Director of Business Operations, J. P. Weidenbach, who cited Stevens' "strong sense of the mission of this University and the role of the safety depar- tment in a large and complex university." Weidenbach con- tinued, "He is highly respected by the University community and by those outside agencies which deal with the University's safety and security matters." STEVENS, WHO took control of the department yesterday, stated he plans to continue along the direction set by Davids, who died suddenly on November 14. "We worked very hard for Mr. Davids," he explained yesterday, Stalled Mideast talks to resume; date for conference From Wire Reports The Egyptian and Israeli governmen- ts have agreed to resume their stalled peace talks in Washington, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said yesterday. The announcement came at the end of nearly three hours of White House talks between President Carter and Egyp- tian Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil. ASKED IF the Israelis have agreed to return to Washington for the talks, Vance said, "They have said they will return at such time as it would be useful to do so." But the secretary of state said the Israeli and Egyptian governments have yet to set a date for resuming the talks, which have been suspended for nearly three weeks. The Israeli government had previously refused to resume the U.S.- sponsored negotiations, saying the Jewish state had made all the negotiating compromises it could. THE PEACE talks had stalled over the question of how strongly an Egyp- nspecified tian-Israeli treaty should be linked to progress toward Palestinian autonomy in the West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip, now, occupied by Israel. The Israelis had refused Egypt's demand for a firm timetable for Palestinian self-rule, saying such a tie- in might cause Egypt to repudiate the entire treaty if the Palestinian issue remains unsolved. Israeli radio reported yesterday Prime Minister Menachem Begin has See EGYPT, Page 10 Saturday " Although he's gone to Chic- ago, deejay Steve Dahl's crazi- ness can still be heard on De- troit's airwaves. see story, Page 5. " American Medical Association critics have already voiced opposition to the organization's proposed ban on advertising by its members. However, local doctors say they wouldn't advertise even if they could. See story, Page 2. stevel "and appreciated his policies and philosophy. We plan to stick with those for right now." As Director of Safety, Stevens will be responsible for coor- dinating campus safety programs for University students and employees. He will also work with city, state, and federal law enforcement agencies in various crime prevention programs. Stevens has been Davids' assistant .since 1971. A native of Battle Creek, he attended Albion College before joining the State Police in 1941 for 30 years. In 1968, he was promoted to com- manding officer of Detroit's second district headquarters. Lack of fire code might force day care out of Ed. Building Nicaragua's Somoza By ELISA ISAACSON Should specific state regulations detailing day care center fire codes fail to be declared soon, the University Child Care Action Center (CCAC) may be forced out from its present location in the School of Education building, nDrhans necessitating a move off cam- A MAJOR complaint of the local child care centers is that the state's citations are often arbitrary or unspecific. Ac- cording toDavid Lowe of the Michigan Child Care Task Force in Lansing, specific guidelines have been in the making since 1973, when a statute was passed authorizing the state to license Kathleen Smiley, co-director of the third floor center, one of the only two nurseries on campus. "We don't have any right to go downstairs" and change the doors. SMILEY SAID the nursery may have to vacate the premises if it cannot meet the guidelines of the state inspectors. defends a MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) - President Anastasio Somoza said yesterday opposition leaders "can go to hell" if they don't like his plans for a plebiscite to determine whether he will stay in office. "I have given the most," Somoza said in an interview. "If they don't like it they can go to hell." It C, A -%...41 plebiscite Somoza said, however, that if he lost he would not quit immediately and another election would choose a con- stituent assembly that would appoint a provisional president to whom he would turn over power. "I WAS motivated by peace and love for the Nicaraguan people," Somoza said of his decision to accept the