RA's, RD's jobs on line for low GPAs By JENNIFER MILLER As many as ten dormitory resident advisors or resident directors may be fired by the University because they do not meet the 2.5 grade point average requirement, Charlene Coady, assistant director of in-residence staff, said yesterday. Three students from Bursley, one from Markley, and six from West Quad and other dorms may be fired, according to Coady and the dorms' directors. COADY AND other housing officials said that the University has no definite plans to fire anyone yet, because Coady's office is still *eviewing RA and RD transcripts. "We won't know until tomorrow (how many don't meet the requirement)," Coady said yesterday. The- deadline for turning in tran- scripts is today. The transcript review is the result of a new policy set last year by the housing office. -UNDER THE NEW policy, -students must maintain a 2.5 GPA from the time they apply in December or January, until fall term em- ployment begins. Previously, RAs and RDs were required to carry a 2.5 average only at the time of application. In the past, RAs and RDs whose averages dropped after the application date "wouldn't have been caught," West Quad Director Alan Levy said. Coady said this is one of the reasons the new policy was implemented. Housing Office Director Robert Hughes said last week that any RAs that fell below the requirement "would be asked to resign." Hughes was out of town and not available for comment this week. BURSLEY DIRECTOR Caroline Gould said four Bursley students' transcripts were in doubt, but Coady said that as of yesterday, only three may lose their jobs. "It's a situation where most of those under question were here last year," when two Bur- sley residents were murdered on April 17, Gould said. One RD whose grade point fell "took several incompletes because of last year's tragedy," Gould said, "and I think with three (others) there has been an error." Gould said she believes the RD should be given an extension to make up the incompletes. "(University President Harold) Shapiro said last year they should be given leniency," Gould said. A BURSLEY RA who may be fired said last year's tragedy "most definitely" had an effect on her grades. The RA, whose grade point fell to 2.45, said she plans to appeal i f'she is fired. Coady said any problems Bursley students may have had "has not been brought to my at- tention." John Finn, housing associate director of student relations, said he also was not aware of any student's specific problems yet, but that he and other housing officials will be discussing the possible firings with Hughes tomorrow. Bursley resident Martha Vinette, whose RA may be fired, said, "How can a grade point average determine how good (RAs) are with students on a hall? If they maintain an average good enough for -their school, why isn't that good enough to be an RA? I think it stinks." VINETTE, AN LSA freshperson, said that if her RA loses the job, the housing office "is going to hear about it" from her fellow residen- ts. See LOW, Page 5 Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom .: ' E 131k i4a 1E aiI DECLINING Partly cloudy, highs in the mid-50s. YEl-XII. T Ten-Page 4o.25,, Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 8, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages Police. have *suspect in city rapes By MARK GINDIN Ann Arbor police have a suspect in the investigation of a series of six in- home rapes commited in the city since* July, Police Chief Corbett said yester- day. Officers have questioned one black man; but no arrests have been made because-the evidence at this point is in- conclusive, Corbett said. FOUR OF THE victims have iden- tified their assailant as a white man. he other two victims have said their rapist tvas black. All six rapes occurred in the victims' homes. In each case, the assailant had gained entrance through an unlocked door or window, Corbett said. In each ease, he added, "We don't think proper precautions were taken." "It looks as though the assailant is casing the, premises, waiting for an Ounlocked window or door,"said city council member Lowell Peterson, who chairs the city's Citizens Advisory Committee on Rape Prevention. "HE (THE RAPIST) has got a well- planned method of operation," Peter- son said. "The chances are very slight that the assault is a spur-of-the-moment event." The attacker probably knows the vic- tims activities and chooses the best time for the rape, Peterson said. "The best wayto avoid a gape is to keep the *doors and windows locked." The police investigation is focusing on the assumption that two rapists are See POLICE, Page 3 Egyptian Parliament endorses Mubarak EGYPTIAN WOMEN IN Sadat's home village of Mit Abul Kom wail and scream in anguish over the assassination of Egypt's president Tuesday. Haiig, Beg iMu bara kraffirm support for Camp David accords From AP and UPI CAIRO, Egypt- In an emergency session yesterday, the Egyptian Parliament endorsed overwhelmingly the nomination that .the nation's ruling party gave Vice President Nosni Mubarak within hours of President Anwar Sadat's assassination Tuesday. The vice president accepted the nomination during a televised meeting with a parliamentary delegation. Meanwhile, it was announced that two of Sadat's assassins were civilians who masqueraded as soldiers to sneak into the milita y review that ended in the bloodbath. Egypt's defense minister was quoted as saying at least two of tsix assassins were not soldiers. THE GOVERNMENT scheduled a referendum next week to approve Mubarak as Sadat's successor. Mubarak said at an impromptu news conference late yesterday that the assassination was a "criminal act un- dertaken by individuals and was by no means a coup attempt." Mubarak was wearing a bandage around his left wrist, indicating he was wounded'in the attack. The vice president reiterated his commitment to Sadat's policies and said the year-long emergency declared immediately after Sadat's death was being enforced "to protect the nati9n from any saboteurs." DEFENSE Minister Abdel Ralim Abu Ghazala said one of the assassins was an officer, one was a retired reser- ve officer and the other two were civilians pretending to be soldiers, the newspaper Al Akhbar reported in its Thursday editions. Abu Ghazala did not elaborate in the newspaper account on how the two civilians, reported to be veterans of Egypt's mandatory military service, slipped into one of the trucks parading past Sadat in a military review that en- ded in the bloodbath. Sadat had numerous enemies in Sadat's assassination and administration lobbying per- suades some congressmen to change their minds on the con- troversial AWACS sale, but ap- proval still looks unlikely. See story Pa ge 5 Egypt and throughout the Arab world, both because of his peace treaty with Israel and his recent roundup of more than 1,500 foes charged with fomenting Moslem-Christian rioting. Palestinians in Lebanon continued celebrating his death yesterday by firing rifles in the air. THREE GROUPS in Beirut claimed responsibility for the attack within hours of the assassination, and one of them purported to be a military branch See EGYPTIAN, Page 5 From AP and UPI A rising concern for continued peace in the Middle East following Tuesday's assassination of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat spurred Israeli, Egyptian, and American leaders to reaffirm their support yesterday of the Camp David accords and a peaceful future for the Mideast. But, even as world leaders urged con- tinued peace in the region, Arab and Iranian revolutionaries urged Egyp- tians to use the assassination to stage a coup against their government. THE REAGAN administration war- ned Libya and other radical Arab nations yesterday that it "would view with great concern" any attempt to seize upon President Anwar Sadat's assassination to meddle with Egypt or otherwise fan instability in the Mideast. Secretary of State Alexander Haig declared also that America remains a full partner in the peace process initiated by Sadat: "this gigantic per- sonality," and is committed to "pursue his work" toward a comprehensive Middle East settlement. Haig pledged full support to the Egyptian government now headed by Hosni Mubarak, Sadat's hand-picked heir. Meanwhile, the Defense Depar- tment continued its order of late Tuesday calling for boosted readiness of the U.S. Rapid Deployment Force and American warships in the Mediterranean. See ISRAEL, Page 5 .o~~a. ._. a ,..... ...a .. nt b o(. .n a .,".""".'.....'.'.'.... .""...'.'.'''' ... ..' . . _a\2fU \ / . .. . .., ..nm , , ./,..,, .,,, , . . . .:.xF.."}..z x a~ a> x . M . .:,. ;, t. ยข :'.. .. , a ., .... :. .... ...... .. .. ........ .*." .... _ P r c d u a and.. ,, w, Procedural and systematic changes have been sitivity, said Ruth Phillips, a doctoral candidate in By PAM FICKINGER made within the University to create a program of af- the University's architecture school. Funds for h~ ' 1Affirmative action should be at the very core of the firmative action, Nordby said. Now the only question scholarships and financial aid for handicapped in- University's role as an educational institution, is "Will it work?," she said. dividuals are getting harder and harder to find, she But the goal of a strong affirmative action "Only the people in charge can make affirmative said. program, like so many of the University's objectives, action work now," Nordby said. JEAN CAMPBELL, director of the Celter for the may be difficult to attain in coming years of financial Regent Nellie Varner said she is worried that the Continuing Education of Women said she was con- hardship. - current atmosphere at the University is not con- hon- THAT'S THE message President Harold Shapiro ducive to overt support for affirmative action. cerned with the lack of female representation in the gave to the more than 150 persons who attended Referring to Shapiro's "smaller but btter" term "Unensnofdthe Unrstagnistri. m s g o a ls yesterday's "People and Issues in Equal, Oppor- coined to describe the University's long range "Unintended or unrecognized," there is a great ftukW e do '.ie i n i e l w r d a h n v r i y i c :t a m l e iln c s a i y b e t r tnity" program. retrenchment poesVaeraishwsntcon- deal of age discrimination at the University, said "Won't ivein r a , ret hat process, Varner said she wasn't Eloise Snyder, publication director at the Institute of "" do'"iei nielwrda h nvriy vne htsalrwlncsaiyb etr Gerontology. Older individuals can be a "productive Shapiro said. "We're facing a situation at the REPRESENTATIVES from a variety of campus GetologynOleriny,"suasan. Unirsityt i v egroups with a need to shrink." roups spoke about some of the special concerns they asset the University," she said. t, /That need to shrink will mean fewer available staff face.y John Russ, a lecturer in the English department, Tanedtshnkwlmenewraaabesff face. charged that the University has no clear commit- positions. And with fewer positions open, Shapiro Eugene Morley, representing Vietnam war ced that e U i ha cler com said, some affirmative action goals will be hard to at- veterans, said he was "shocked" when he learned the ment to recruit black high school students from tain. University had no full-time representative for Michigan cities with large black populations such as UNIVERSITY Affirmative Action Director veterans' concerns. Both society at large and the Detroit, Flint, and Saginaw. Virginia Nordby cautioned against using the current University owe Vietnam veterans special con- educational opportunities, said CarLs Arce, an budget woes as an excuse to pull' back from the sideration, he said. University's commitment to affirmative action. Handicapped individuals also need a special sen- See TIGHT, Page 3 t TODAY Defender turns enforcer ACK SMITH is about to trade in his briefcase for a nightstick and a K-9 companion. A lawyer who says he is tired of seeing criminals go "unpunished," Smith has decided to give up practicing law in Pittsburgh and is heading for Venice, Fla., where he will enforce the law, although it will mean a drastic cut in his current $26,000 annual salary. "I've always wanted to become a police officer, and I just Marta Mahan, 6, was credited with saving the lives of sleeping tenants in seven 'apartments early Tuesday when she ignored her mother's order to flee the burning apar- tment building, fire officials said. Instead, she ran through the three-story brick building shouting "Fire," and knocking on the doors of the other apartments to alert the tenants, mostly college students, to the 2:30 a.m. blaze, said her mother, Joanne Mahan. "I guess they said if it wasn't for her, they'd all be sleeping still," Ms. Mahan said. "The building went up like a matchstick." Marta, who has three uncles in the Albany fire department, was helped out the back by tenants she had awakened, her mother said. "The little girl did a good job," said Albany Fire Chief Joseph! his doctors at Stanford MedicalCenter in California about his bike trip, Hayes' hometown physician approved of the, idea. During a stopover in Colorado, Hayes said although he must take "about 48 pills a day," he can play football, baseball and pedal his way across the country. He left Knoxville Sept. 4 and says he has an appointment in Stan- ford on Oct. 26. Hayes said he may be a few days late. O Best of the worst Newspaper reporters, Wall Street brokers and used car salesmen are the worst dressed, while cowboys are at the who looks as if he can barely tie his shoelaces is savvy enough to report on matters of crucial importance." At the other end of the spectrum, Hix gives his top honors to cowboys "because they recognize that clothing must, first and foremost, be funtional." Cowboys don't wear western boots because they're trendy," said Hix. On the inside The Arts page features a preview of Saturday night's Gordon Lightfoot concert.. . the Opinion page presents an , I i