t Army to F ermit women. t o wear , arrin s WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S.. Amny, reluctantly marching in step with fashion, has decided that women in fiuiorm can wear earrings - as long as hey're not gaudy and "fit snugly gainst the ear." Since the 1970s, women in the ranks jve filed "numerous requests" for permission to wear the jewelry on duty, accprding to an Army spokesman. The change in regulation was ordered last month, after lengthy study by the Ar- y's Uniform Board. THE NEW directive was praised ysterday by some women working at the Pentagon. I like it," said Spec. 5 Dannette HAle, who was not wearing earrings, but who said she wears them once or twice a week. Spec. 4 Ane Thomson, wearing a tiny biearl on each ear, agreed. "IT'S ABOUT time. I think I look bet- Er with earrings, anyway. They're 'Not everyone was happy. One colonel, who declined to be indentified because "it's Army policy now and we've got to follow it," he said. "It's not like the old days. You sort of vonder what's coming next." ACTUALLY, the move brings the Army into line with;the Air Force and Navy, which have permitted earrings for several years. Like women of the other armed for- es, the Army's 75,000 women must -wear earrings that meet strict specifications. A Army spokesman, quoting from regulations to be published in an up- dated uniform manual, said the only accedptable earrings will be "spherical and unadorned, not to exceed one- quarter inch in diameter." They must be2made of either gold, silver or pearl, which eliminates costume baubles. The ,wery must "fit snugly against the r " ONLY ONE per ear, the Army added. the jewelry may be worn with either te full-dress uniform or the everyday service greens, but not with fatigues. The Michigan Daily - Thurs School board to i to students' test s CHICAGO (AP) - A suburban school board whose district has been called an "academic graveyard" is planning to withhold merit pay from ad- ministrators unless their students start showing progress. "We'll rate the superintendent, prin- cipals and other top administrators - give them report cards, if you will - on progress of pupil's scores and decide if they are worth merit pay," board President Thelma Demonbreun said yesterday. "We think administrators are responsible for the academic climate of their buildings." GARY MARX, associate executive director of the American Association of School Administrators, said he knows of no other district in the country tht has an administrators' salary program linked directly to pupils' scores on national, standardized tests. Dozens of school districts, however, plan to experiment with merit pay in some form for teachers, and Dallas schools recently adopted a plan providing bonuses for teachers in schools where test scores are higher than expected. But the West Harvey Elementary School District south of Chicago is pin-, ning responsibility at the top, and its first move last July was to hire a new superintendent, 41-year-old Edward Smith, formerly an assistant at Dowagiac. "I LIKE THE new policy," Smith said. "It changes the old concept of academic custodian to instructional leader. We will work closer with the teachers and have contact with studen- ts. Such leadership is a realistic ap- proach to the problem." Smith said, "It's difficult to talk about an excellent administration when they are presiding over . . . an academic graveyard . . . The board rejected that concept as being illogical." Linda Randle, mother of five children who attend Garfield School in the district, said basing salary increases on scores "is a marvelous idea, but I am for credibility. It has to work through the parent, teacher, and the ad- ministrator. THE ACADEMIC level in the district of 2,500 pupils "has been one of the lowest in the whole Chicago area for years and parents are very concer- ned," Randle said. "We lose a lot of good teachers because they are frustrated and leave. And other schools rip off our good teachers.' Most of the pupils come from low- income families. Last year's results of the California Test of Basic Skills showed only kin- day, September 15, 1983=--Page 9 ink pay; cores dergarten pupils reaching national average. The scores of pupils in the fife th through eighth grades averaged 214 years behind the national average in reading and mathematics. SMITH DESCRIBED the California Test of Basic Skills as a widely used exam to help school districts measure the performance of their students. Under the West Harvey plan, which takes effect a year from now, the board set as a first-year goal raising reading and math scores for kindergarten through fourth-graders to the national average. For the second year the goal is to raise all pupil scores to the national average. If these objectives are not met, an nual merit pay would be cut by 20 per cent. It would be reduced by 30 percent the following year if there is little or no progress. The policy affects the superintendent, six principals and five other ad- ministrators. Principals received $26,000 to $31,000 a year. Smith, who is paid $45,000 said the amount of merit pay varied from year to year dependin- g on district finances. Leon Hendricks, principal of King Elementary School in the district, said the policy "is a form of merit pay and means we will get recognized for the work we are doing, and give us another incentive to do more." AP Photo, Derailed An inspector reviews the wrecked cars of a yesterday after it rammed a train which crewmen were killed in the collision. train outside Sullivan,. Indiana had stalled ahead of it. Two Fund raiser drops Planned WASHINGTON (AP) - Planned Parenthood was dropped yesterday from the federal government's annual employee charity drive in a ruling the group charged was motivated by hostility to its pro-abortion activity. Donald Devine, director of the Office of Personnel Management, ruled that Planned Parenthood failed to meet cer- tain financial and accounting requirements to receive donations from the * $100 million Combined Federal Campaign. "THE DECISION was based upon Planned Parenthood's 'failure to com- ply with financial and-accounting stan- dards required by OPM regulations," the agency said in a statement. "Plan- fled Parenthood's application was not sufficiently candid and complete to begin conformance with the applicable rules." '(Devine) has made no secret of his hos to the activities of Planned Parenthood -Faye Watt President of Pla Paren But Faye Wattleton, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, accused Devine of basing his decision on his publicly stated op- position to abortion. "Mr. Devine has made no secret of his hostility to the activities of Planned Parenthood," Wattleton said. "It is this hostility and not any of the various so- called technical issues that are at the root of his decision." DEVINE'S ruling cam three days of hearings earli th at which anti-aborti presented evidence tha Parenthood was ineligib ticipate in the campaign, Tapscott, a spokesman for nel office. The decision means thatf ployees cannot donate mon ned Parenthood through the Planned Parenthood, whic abortion rights and famil3 has been receiving about year from the Combined Fe paign, which receives dona Parenthood million federal employees nationwide, Tapscott said. Planned Parenthood has participated in the fund-raising drive stility ic 8. since 1968. TAPSCOTT contended Devine's decision was not motivated by his op- le ton, position to abortion. inned "Precisely because he feels so inten- sely about abortion, he planned and did thood bend over backwards to ensure that Planned Parenthood's rights were respected in every possible way" at the f w hearings, Tapscott said. e m- otfollowng The decision was based on "whether risn gro- or not the sources of Planned Paten on groups thood's funding met the requirements t Planned of the CFC," Tapscott said. )le, to par- THE CAMPAIGN requires that no said Mark more than 20 percent of an- the person- organizations budget can come from the federal government and no less federal em- than 50 percent may be from members ney to Plan- of the general public, he said. campaign. Last year, Devine rejected requests ,ch promotes by anti-abortion groups to remove ty planning, Planned Parenthood from the fund $800,000 a drive. He overruled a recommendation sderal Cam- by the campaign's eligibility commit- tions from 4 tee to drop Planned Parenthood. INDIVIDUAL THE TREE Z 5th Ave or Liberty 741.0700 $2.00 WED. SAT. SUN. SHOWS BEFORE6PM ENDS TONIGHTI "EASY MONEY" (R) AT 7:30, 9:40 STARTS FRI. LIMITED 7 DAY ENGAGEMENT FROM THE DIRECTOR OF "BREAKER MORANT" AND "TENDER MERCIES" BRUCE BERESFORD'S S A UNIVERSAL CLASSIC FRI. 7:10, 9:10 "AN ENGROSSING ROMANTIC MYSTERY" Judith Christ GERARDDEPARDIEU AND NATHALLE BAYE IN .. . TTHE RETURN OF MARTIN GUERRE THURS., FRI. 7:25, 9:30 A Aecused gduard w A Wells Fargo guard accused of stealing $7 million in the second largest robbery in U.S. history was not registered as i1 armored car employee as required by state law, state ice said yesterday. Victor M. Gerena, 25, remained the object of a nationwide hunt as police inspected his abandoned car and interviewed two other guards he disarmed at gunpoint, bound, gagged, and allegedly drugged at a company terminal late Monday Ieiore disappearing with the loot in all denominations. But blood tests showed no evidence of drugs in Timothy R. Gerard, 21, of Tolland and James McKeown, 25, or Hartford, who said they were injected with a sleeping potion by Gerena before he loaded his rented car with the money. W WELLS FARGO has offered a $35,000 reward for the part- me guard who earned less that $5 an hour and was to have been married Friday. Authorities ordered watches on airpor- ts and national borders. F State police spokesman John McLeod said Gerena was reegistered with Wells Fargo's Guard Service but was fired from that division in Jan., 1983. Gerena was rehired by the firm's Armored Service office io West Hartford - where he staged the robbery Monday right - but there were no records of the company's request to have him certified, McLeod said. as llegally hired Wells Fargo Guard Services and Wells Fargo Armored Service are both divisions of Baker Industries, but have separate quarters and operate independently. McLEOD SAID the firm could have its license suspended or revoked as a result of the apparent violation, but noted no company has ever lost its license for failing to register an employee. Robert A. Guerin, president of Wells Fargo Armored Ser- vice Corp. in Atlanta, GA., Wednesday refused comment on Gerena's employment history or on the reasons why he was fired from the Guard Service division. A spokesman for Gerena's family and fiance said they were "shocked and baffled" by his actions. "The family is dumbfounded and at a total loss to explain this, except to think that here's a guy who handles millions of dollars and maybe breaks," said family attorney Michael J. Graham. "If Victor chooses to surrender, he should call my office and we will arrange to have him turn himself in in the most safe way possible so that no one gets hurt and under the most favorable conditions we can negotiate," Graham said. Gerena, who is divorced, was to be married Friday to Ann Elizabeth Soto, 20. Graham said he believes police are cer- tain Miss Soto, who lived with her fiance, knew nothing about his plans. NOON LUNCHEON Home-made soup & Sandwich $1 September 16 DEAN JAMES CROWFOOT, School of Natural Resources "The challenges of downsizing the University GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe (662-5189) Are Intere You ste d in1 T-1n a r r a w l b There will be ../ ar nity? a Fraternity Save Lock it w U i A lock that really stops t I guarantees your bicycle Impossible? 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