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September 23, 1983 - Image 3

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The Michigan Daily, 1983-09-23

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The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 23, 1983 - Page 3

'U'financial aid director

criticizes dr
By JAN RUBENSTEIN
"The basic underpinning of this institution is to further
education, not deny it," said the University's financial aid
director last night in attacking the controversial legislation
that links student aid to draft registration.
Speaking at a panel discussion in the Law Quad, Finan-
cial Aid Director Harvey Grotrian said the University is
upset with the role it must play in implementing the law,
known as the Solomon Amendment.
ALTHOUGH THE University only has to require a
student's signature declaring his draft registration status
and doesn't have to verify the statement's legitimacy,
Grotrian said he expects administrative costs this year to
top $18,000. By 1985, the U.S. Department of Education will
hold schools responsible for the statements' accuracy as
well, adding additional costs.
The University has spent $14,000 to date, Grotrian said.
Three University students - including one woman -
already have refused to sign the statement, and Grotrian
said last night that another 75 to 80 students have not
declared themselves one way or another.
While the financial aid office says it will help students who

aft law
do not apply with the law to secure jobs and other sources of
funds, Grotrian said he does not expect that the University
will ever subsidsize these students, as have some other
colleges and universitites.
After the panel discussion, Psychology Prof. Martin Gold
said for the first time that at least one student had ap-
proached him for help in finding financial aid. Gold, who
chairs the University's Civil Liberties Board, had announ-
ced earlier in the month that he was identifying alternative
sources of aid for students who refused to comply.
The second member of the panel, Amy Silverberg, a
lawyer from the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union, urged the
University to become more active in its opposition to the
law. Silverberg's organization, along with the Minnesota
Public Interest Research Group, was responsible for for-
cing a temporary delay in the law's implementation this
summer when a Minnesota judge declared the law uncon-
stitutional. The Supreme Court has since issued a stay of
the judge's order, pending a full hearing this fall.
Grotrian expressed no opinion as to whether the Univer-
sity would join several other institutions in filing "friend of
the court" briefs in support of the Minnesota group.

Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER
University Director of Financial Aid Harvey Grotrian speaks at a panel discussion on the federal law which links finan-
cial aid to draft registration. Amy Silverberg of the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union also participated in the discussion
last night at the Lawyer's Club Lounge.

-HAPPENINGS-
Highlights
The voice of the auctioner will be heard at the Michigan Theater tonight
at the 4th Annual Benefit Auction for the Theater. Admission is free and the
festivities start at 6:30 p.m.
Films
Alternative Action - Them, 7:30 p.m.; The Day The Earth Stood Still, 9:15
p.m., Natural Science.
Ann Arbor Film Co-op - Flesh Gordon, 7 & 10:20 p.m.; What's Up, Tiger
Lily?, 8:40 p.m., MLB 4.
Cinema Guild- Looking For Mr. Goodbar, 7 & 9:30 p.m., Lorch Hall.
Cinema Two - The Night Of The Shootinag Stars, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A,
Angell.
Performances
The Brecht Company - A Man's A Man, 8 p.m., Residential College
Auditorium, 701 East University.
The Ark - Hedy West, 8 p.m., 1421 Hill.
The Performance Network - Wisdom Amuk, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington.
School of Music - Oral Moses, Oral recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall.
Speakers
Guild House - Representatives from LaGROC, "U of M Stonewalls
Lesbian and Gay Male Rights," noon, 802 Monroe.
College of Engineering - J.H. Watmuff, "Some Effects Of Rotation On
Turbulent Boundary Layers," 3:30 p.m., 113 Aerospace Engineering
Building.
College of Engineering - James Paul, "Application Of Potential Flow
Panel MethodsTo Non-AerospaceFluid Flow Problems," 3:30 p.m., 107
Aerospace Engineering Building.
College of Engineering - Thomas Sutton, "E.M. Intensity Correlations
From Transparent Emitters," 3:45 p.m., White Auditorium, Colley
Building.
Center for Western European Studies - Dr. Wilhelm Diest, "The German
Military and the Breakdown of Imperial Germany," 4 p.m., East Conference
Room, Rackham.
The Exhibit Museum - Jim Louden, "Space Shuttle Integrated: Mission 7
?and 8,"7:30 p.m., MLB 3.
Department of Chemistry - R.D. Adams, "the Role of Sulfideo Ligands in
the Synthesis and Reactivity of Higher Nuclearity Metal Carbonyl Cluster
Compounds," 4 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Building.
Museum of Art - Art Break, Ginny Castero," Gerome Kamrowski: A
Retrospective Exhibition," 12:10 p.m., W. Gallery.
Meetings
Chinese Student Christian Fellowship - 7:30 p.m., Memorial Christian
Church, 730 Tappan.
Korean Christian Fellowship - 9 p.m., Campus chapel.
Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class, 7:30 p.m., University Reformed Church.
Tae Kwon Do Club -5 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Room.
Duplicate Bridge Club - 7:15 p.m., Michigan League.
Miscellaneous
Michigan Gay Undergraduates - "Totally Wild Dance Party," 9 p.m.,
Lawyer's Club Lounge.
Michigan Union - Exhibit and Sale of Old Movie Posters, 10 a.m., to 6
p.m., 1st floor Union.
American Association of University Women - 31st Annual Book Sale, 10
a.m., to 7 p.m., Union Ballroom.
SOS Community Crisis Center -Interviews for prospective volunteers, all
day, 114 North River Street, Ypsilanti.
Folk Dance Club - Teaching Serbian dances, 8 p.m., Dance Studio.
To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, M. 48109.
t

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