The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 29, 1979-Page 3 DETROIT LOSES CONVENTION SITE Dems Pick From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-The Democratic Party decided yesterday to return to New York City and the scene of Jimmy Carter's 1976 triumph for its 1980 presidential convention. The big plus that swung the conven- tion to New York was that there are hotel rooms no more than a cross-town ride away from the convention center. In Detroit, which was one of three cities vying for the Democrats, delegates would have had to drive an hour from dormitory rooms at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, while Philadelphia was counting on rooms in Atlantic City, N.J. The Republicans already have picked Detroit for their convention, which begins July 14, 1980. The Democrats will open in New York on Aug. 11. THE SITE COMMITTEE'S decision is final and not subject to approval by the Democratic National Committee. The GOP choice was settled only after a bitter floor fight before its national committee. The vote was not even close. Twenty- three members of the party's site selec- tion committee backed the Big Apple while three voted for Detroit and two for Philadelphia. The White House expressed no preference in the race since Carter's hometown favorite, Atlanta, was never in the running. A party rule forbids Kenneth Sti holding the convention in states, like to express hi Georgia, that have not ratified the Equal Rights Amendment. ALL THREE finalists offered similar packages for the 1980 meeting.s H i In New York's case it was a $7.3 j million package that includes free use of Madison Square Garden for the con- vention, the adjoining Felt Forum and other meeting areas; all the police protection necessary and buses to carry delegates from their hotels to the Gar- Part of den at no expense. minority stu It also was at the last New York con- here. vention that Democrats finally buried Accordin the hatchet on a decade of internal University B reform battles and joined ranks for a retention of comeback that left them the dominant American st political force in the federal, state, and while 46.3 pe local governments. blacks, and The report sa See DEMS, Page 12 MICHAE Concerns in Drto day Dr. Diag in D. C. Several Daily staffers interning in Washington this summer have reported seeing Richard Robin- son, Ann Arbor's infamous Dr. Diag, in the nation's capitol. He told one staff member he is working for Rep. Carl Pursell (R-Ann Arbor). A spokesman for Pursell's office said Robinson, known for his speeches from atop a trash receptacle in the Diag, is not on Pursell's staff, but spends niuch of his time in the Congressman's office and "tries to mooch things." Apparently Robinson is in Washington to escape the heat from his conviction on an assault charge in Ann Arbor. The spokesman said Robinson is living in a mission and trying to find a job, and at- tends congressional subcommittee hearings in the meantime. It's comforting to know Ann Arbor citizens have a man in Washington. Rowdy mini-Wolverines An unidentified caller reported a disturbance in West Quad Wednesday night, where junior high school and high school aged boys are staying in three houses for the Wolverine Wrestling Clinic. "A lot of noise seemed to be coming from one room" New York for 1980 Hit the roadJackA gall of Texas made a 290-mile trip from his hometown of Quinlan to Childress riding on "Tennessee" the mule s solution to the current gas crunch. Stigall has his bedroll, a sign, and a stray along with him on the trip. rh minority attrition challenges 'U' By BETH PERSKY Second of Two Parts the challenge of increasing the number of dents attending the University is keeping them g to the February 1979 annual report to the oard of Regents on recruitment, enrollment, and .minority students, 68 per cent of Native udents disenrolled before their senior years, r cent of Hispanic Americans, 42.7 per cent of 25.9 per cent of Asian Americans dropped out. id 26 per cent of white students also disenrolled. L GARCIA, program associate for Minority the University's Affirmative Action Programs, said, "there are a number of reasons" for the minority at- trition rate. "Some are personal reasons, some are scholastic reasons, some are financial reasons, some are transfer reasons," Garcia said. "We have no successful way of assessing minority student needs soon enough so they can remain here as students," said Elizabeth Davenport, University Ombudsperson. Supportive services aimed specifically at minority students include the Opportunity Program, which offers counseling and tutorial assistance for students who may not come from an enriched academic background; Trotter House, a meeting place for minorities, Minority Student Ser- vices, which provides programming and personal coun- seling, the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills (CULS), See MINORITY, Page 13 from 11:30 p.m. until midnight, the caller said, and when a campus security officer checked on the situation, "literally dozens of guys were running up and down stairs.. . shouting 'panty raid.' " The secret informant said someone yelled across a cour- tyard: " 'What's going on?' " The reply: " 'We're all busted!' " West Quad Building Director Leon West confirmed that security had looked into a cer- tain event, but stressed that the teen-agers have caused no more disturbances than usually occur during the regular school year. The wrestlers behave "just like 14-year-olds," the building direc- tor said. It seems the Quad's rowdy reputation still hangs on during an otherwise quiet summer. Gasfor peanuts Steve Gottshall-of Doylestown, Pa. said he was just trying to give the patrons of his gas stations a reason to smile when he wore Arab-style headgear and handed out peanuts while pumping gas. Got- tshall said some customers waited in line for two hours to buy gas, so he passed out the peanuts as they reached the pumps as a way of "thanking Mr. Carter for all this. I'm just trying to keep everybody happy," he said. Gottshall wrapped a black T-shirt around his head and tied it with a narrow band. "I don't know how Arabs dress like this-it's hot," he added. Happenings .. . ... finish your chores before the holiday weekend during the day, because happenings won't start un- til 8 p.m., when music student Janis Roese will give an organ recital in Hill Auditorium . . . also at 8 p.m., the Lighthouse, a Christian performing group, will present the gospel through song, dance, and drama in the Mendelssohn Theatre. . . again at 8 p.m., there will be a reading of the play Hadrian VII in the Canterbury Loft, 332 S. State St.... FILMS: Ann Arbor Film Co-op Monty Python and the Holy Grail, 7 p.m., 8:40 p.m., and 10:20 p.m. in mlb... .Cinema Guild-M*A*S*H, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., Old A and D Aud... . Cinema II-I Want to Hold Your Hand, 7:30 p.m., and A Hard Day's Night, 9:30 p.m., both in Aud. A, Angell Hall. On the outside It looks as though yesterday's sunny skies won't stay with us another day. Although it will be partly sunny and warm, there is a 40 per cent chance of rain, with scattered showers and thunderstorms. The high will hit 800 and the-low will drop to the60s.