w w , r Tuiti on from 1 $35,000 per year income as an engineer must also pay for her older sister's graduate school. The only other source of income Johnsen has are the social security checks she has been receiving since her mother died when Mary was 12, but they don't make a dent towards the $10,000 a year needed for an out-state student to attend the University of Michigan. Johnsen's situation is not uncommon. Each year the University raises tuition and federal and state governments cut move from financial aid, it faces many students to find affordable alternatives to an education at the University. The economic peril threatens to destroy the diversity of students the University enrolls. The chance for an education at the University of Michigan is becoming available only to affluent students. The possibility that the University community will become more homogeneous, only enrolling people with the same values and same background, is becoming more likely each year. "The trend is in that direction," ad- mits Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs. You will have a greater preponderance of affluence. It is a bad trend because it limits the access of students to a high quality education. "It denies equal access to social op- portunities and future job oppor- tunities. It nourishes a state of inequality." Liam Sugrue, one of nine children from an Irish family in Queens. New York is a freshman living in Alice Lloyd Dormitory. It was only with a -one-year merit' scholarship, financial aid, and a 40-hour a week job that Sugrue was able to enroll at the Univer- sity. Next year, without the scholar- ship, Sugrue won't be able to stay in Ann Arbor. "The University expects parents to put in $5000 extra and there is no way they can put it in," Sugrue says. "Everyone else from out-of-state seems to have bucks. Me and my roommates are the poorest kids on the hall. More and more, Michigan is becoming an elite school. They keep on jacking up the price." - Tuition, room and board, and books for one year is estimated to be $6,400 for Michigan residents, and $10,000 for non- residents. Even with financial aid, the average in-state student comes up $800 short of the costs of attending the University. For out-of-state students, the figure is $5000, which is then made up with guaranteed student loans, scholarships, or family money. This year the financial aid office received 4,660 applications but was able to provide only 10 percent of in-state applicants with the entire amount of money they needed. This is a dramatic drop from the 95 percent of students the office could fully accommodate in 1981. Students from middle income families are having the most difficult time tryingto find outside resources to make up for the high costs, says Harvey Grotrian, director of financial aid. Grotrian says he is concerned that this trend will affect the diversity of. students who can afford to attend the University. "We are not going to let this become an institution for the poor and the wealthy. We are trying to develop the means as quickly as we can to see that kind of polarization doesn't develop. "We have been lulled into a sense of. security relying on state support and we must be more aggressive in developing the private sources for student aid." Creating alumni scholarships, a University loan program or boasting private funds are viable options for the future but, in the meantime, the lack of money is deterring potential applicants from considering Michigan. A LUMNI RECRUITERS SAY many low to middle-income students aren't even considering Michigan this year because they fear there is no financial aid. "Kids from the city aren't applying because they are discouraged," said Doris Rubinstein, chairman of scholar- ships for the New York Alumni Club. "They see the cost and the financial aid available and they look at the odds of not getting in and don't apply. And they aren't poor, but middle class." "The economic situation and the rising costs makes the University of Michigan almost unattainable or else plunges a student into huge debt," she said. Students from the more affluent New York suburbs such as Great Neck and Roslyn, however, continue to send about 100 students to Michigan each year. For wealthier students, Michigan is a safety net. If they are denied ad- missions at an Ivy League school, they have Michigan to fall back on. In such cases, Michigan is considered to be a good deal compared to the more expen- sive private Eastern schools. A study conducted by the Univer- sity's admissions office concluded that 15 out of 20 schools a Michigan ap- plicant considers are private in- stitutions, such as Harvard, Yale and Cornell University. Michigan is competing with these top colleges for qualified applicants, and students have become consumers, trying to find the best deal for their money. The University has increased its recruiting programs, sending ad- missions counselors or alumni representatives all over Michigan and the United States to attract more ap- plicants. A 14 percent increase in out-of-state applications for next fall and a one per- cent increase for in-state applications can be attributed partially to these recruiting efforts, said Lance Erickson, associate admissions director. But overall enrollment is steadily decreasing. The high costs and studen- ts' perception that there is not enough financial aid is causing the decrease along with the declining number of high school graduates. (The University's severe budget problems in recent years, however, have not altered the institution's image among potential undergraduates. High school counselors still consider the University a highly competitive and prestigious school.) In order to fulfill the freshman enrollment requirement this year, the admissions office had to take almost 800 applicants from their wait list-300 more than in 1981. Only 62 percent of Michigan residents who were admitted actually enrolled and 34 percent of out- state students, a 6 percent decrease from 1981. There is a lack of middle-income students from out-state at the Univer- sity, says Clif Sjogren, director of ad- missions. The out-state students who do get in here are often the ones who would have otherwise gone to Ivy League schools. "We can't be as competitive as Ivy League schools who can provide more financial aid," Sjogren says. "We want r .... . ..................-.................... ......_:::_::: .:. .......... .:-:.:v . ::vv": ":::.:if~i?<>:?i :i ">:i "::i::. :" ;^ :::":: ::: ." COVER STORY. Enrollment Page 1 the Ark - an all-star lineup prevails, as Tom Paxton, Bob Gibson, and Anne :Hills take the folk stage this weekend. CLASSICS RESTAURANTS The Earle With inflation, rising tuition, and decreased finan- cial aid, the University faces a dubious question: Can a state institution of higher learning maintain both superior standards and a diversified student body in. difficult economic times? Cover photo and design by Jeff Schrier. THEATER One of Ann Arbor's b4 lovers of fine food and r DISCS Olde sounds Page 6 Siblings Page 4 Chekhov's classis Three Sisters fraternize in provincial Russia for a new PTP production. Mean- while, the RC Players have a ball with playwright Sam Shepherd. MUSIC The Academy of Early Music enjoy the sounds of yesteryear, on lutes, harpsichords, and pipes. And they're helping the rest of us appreciate vintage classical as well. THE LIST Local winners SLK and the Urbatio cing to the tune of newly listen with this week's r BOOKS____ __ Happenings Pages 7-10 Dance fever Harvey Grotrian: Directing financial ad to continue to attract really good students. Despite (the fact) that the percentage of students accepting us is down in numbers, we are making up for that in the quality of students." The price for recruiting what Sjogren calls the "blue chip student," however, may be a loss in diversity for the University. Higher SAT scores and class ranks which characterize a top-notch student are directly related to higher socio- economic class, Sjogren said. Usually the parents' attitudes in these students' homes or in their lifestyles are more sophisticated. A student whose father is a lawyer, for example, will often have higher verbal SAT scores, Sjogren said. The average SAT score for Univer- sity freshmen this year was 1150 - a 540 verbal score and a 610 math score - which is 10 points higher than 1981. The high quality student often brings a large wallet with him to the Univer- sity and provides much needed revenue because he pays the higher out- state tuition. Enrollment is headed toward more affluent students and away from lower and middle income students, Sjogren says. "As price is increasing there is a discouraging lower number of middle- to low-income students coming from typical high schools. Now we get in- creasing numbers of students from af- fluent districts with strong test scor'es," Sjogren says. HIGH SCHOOL COUNSELORS are seeing this same pattern among their students. Jim Alexander, college consultant at Highland Park High School in Highland Park, Ill., which has had as many as 50 students in a fresh- man class at the University, says students are moving away from private or expensive public schools such as Michigan, toward cheaper public schools or community colleges. "Kids are told limits by their parents. .. They don't think they can afford to ap- ply for aid when they either get nothing and are denied aid, or they get some aid and it is expected for parents to put in the rest and there is no way they can af- ford the cost," Alexander says. The financial aid problem isn't the same for poor students, he explains. With them it is a simple matter of filing paperwork for the aid. Another problem is that Michigan's time schedule for informing students how much financial aid they can get is so late in the year, it discourages students from applying. An applicant may have to wait until late April or May after being accepted to the University to find out if he or she can get enough financial aid to actually enroll. Other public universities, such as the University of Iowa, inform students of acceptance and financial aid simultaneously, as early as October or November. The University of Wiscon- sin sends its housing applications out in August before a student's senior year in high school and the University of Illinois' Greek system begins recruiting students for fraternities and sororities in November. When a student who applied to Michigan is waiting to hear from the school, he or she is surrounded by peers who already know their room assign- ments, roommates and sometimes even their classes. It can make the wait frustrating and Michigan seem less ap- pealing. In-state applicants are having dif- ficulties of a different kind. More Michigan residents are staying home and enrolling in community colleges or less expensive state universities. In some cases, a student will transfer to Ann Arbor for his junior year to get a degree from the University but saving two years of expenses. The University of Michigan-Flint, for example, has received more ap- plications in the past two years than ever before. According to Monique Calling Collins Page 5 Your guide to fun times for the coming week in Ann Arbor. Film capsules, music previews, theater notes, and bar dates, all listed in a handy-dandy, day-by-day schedule. Plus a roster of local restaurants. You can't hurry Phil at the sold-out Major Events featuring the former drummer of Genesis. Over at Weekend Weekend is edited and managed by students on the Weekend, (313) 763-0 Friday, February 4, 1983 staff of The Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Ar-Daily, 764-0552; Circulat Vol. 1, Issue 15Mihgn a MyarDl, Magazine Editor ..................Ben Ticho bor, Michigan, 48109. It appears in the Friday edition tising, 764-0554. Associate Editors......................Larry Dean of the Daily every week during the University year Mare Hodges and is available for free at many locations around the Copyright 1983, The Mi Susan Makuch campus and city. #M OCITIZEN 01014 cow ~(~ *E 6; *7* X: ZlN&.- MAWSpu y 63r t '- '! Water resistent to 99 ft. Scratch-resistant crystal, :M Waso 4 S4t1lSweep second hand. CRThere's no such thing as an OVE r.u O p tcA't5ss 42. PE otT ST4- 7 7 PAY? A W fK MON-SAT 74wIV3opm SUN qam-Ap 3 A new and visually r Pavlova traces the I ballerina. Also, a look templative rethinking c 14 Weekend/February 4, 1983