Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom I f t t IEtIaII Thaw-ish Mostly cloudy today with tem- peratures in the high thirties. Get out your boots. Vol. XCIV-No. 96 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, January 26, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight pages Presidential hopefuls call caucus unfair By NEIL CHASE Most political observers agree that with his labor endorsements, Walter Mondale has a lock on the upcoming Michigan Democratic caucus. But organizers of the campaigns run- ning behind Mondale say the truth is that the caucus system is rigged against them. ........ ~." X, They say the system attracts party leaders and active -nembers - where Mondale's strength lies strongest - at the expense of the average Democratic voter. THEY ARE UPSET that Michigan's system does not allow secret ballots or absentee ballots. At least one candidate's staff says they are perturbed enough to consider filing suit in an attempt to change the rules, and several other candidates are pondering whether to join the action. Campaign organizers for some of the Democratic presidential candidates met in Detroit last night to study the lawsuit. AT STAKE ARE 93 of the 155 delegates Michigan will be sending to the Democratic convention in San Francisco this summer. The candidate who does best will bring the most supporters along with him to the convention. The remaining Michigan delegates will be chosen from state party leaders-or elected of- ficials. The Rev. James Holley, state coordinator for the Rev. Jesse Jackson's campaign, said the caucus strongly favors Mondale. Last month, Holley and the state coor- dinators for five other presidential candidates sent a letter to the state Democratic party asking them to change the rules. The letter was signed by representatives for Alan Cranston, John Glenn, Gary Hart, Ernest Hollings, and George McGovern; THE GROUP IS pushing hard for a secret ballot. The open ballot could unfairly pressure people to vote for Mondale, said Cherie Bullard, coordinator for McGovern's presiden- tial bid. She said that labor leaders - who have already publicly backed Mondale - might look over union members' shoulders, thus pressuring them to vote for Mondale. She said her campaign was especially worried because more than thirty of the state's 400 caucuses will be held in union halls. "What's going to prevent the union president from standing over his folks as they come in?" she asked. "That's intimidation." State Rep. Richard Fitzpatrick, a leading supporter of John Glenn's state campaign, echoed Bullard's reservations about the open voting system. "The fundamental principle in this country is that you vote in private," he said. BULLARD ALSO said that a lack of publicity for the caucus will strengthen Mondale's cam- paign. She said that notices will only be mailed out to active party members. The remaining publicity has been left to individual county managers, she said. She said that leaving many of the caucus rules in the hands of county and local officials will result in very little protection against citizens casting more than one vote or against dishonest ballot counting. MEANWHILE, Mondale's state represen- tatives are riding out the storm. The caucus system is supposed to let party leaders select their choice for presidential can- didate, said Ellen Globokar, state coordinator for Mondale's campaign. "It is not a primary," she said. "I think it's really up to the party to determine its rules." SHE SAID the former vice president would do well in the state even if there were secret ballots and absentee votes. The absentee votes would be especially helpful, she said, because of the strong support Mondale has among elderly voters. Although the state's attorney general may be asked to decide the legality of the system, in- dications from those below him are that the state will keep its hands out of the matter. There is probably little the state could do anyway, said Jim Chapman, a state elections specialist. Although state-run elections must be conduc- ted by secret ballot, the party caucus does not fall under the state's jurisdiction, he said. See CANDIDATES, Page 3 Officials may tie. dorm rate hikes to inflation By GEOFF JOHNSON University Director of Housing Robert iughes said yester- day he would probably recommend that room and board rates for next year be raised by only 3.9 percent instead of the 5.7 percent increase initially proposed this week by, two housing committees. The 3.9 percent increase would be equivalent to the rate of inflation for 1983, said Hughes yesterday at Campus Meet the Press. HUGHES SAID he will make his final recommendation to the regents next month after he reviews the reports by the two housing panels. The 3.9 percent hike would be considerably lower than last: year's housing cost increases of 5.95 percent in traditional residence halls and 9.95 percent in non-traditional halls and family housing. See DORM, Page 2 Reagan seeks to trimi WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan declared in an election-year State of the Union address last night that "America is back, standing tall," and sought constitutional power to trim spending and stem the federal deficit without raising taxes. And hours after engaging House Speaker Thomas O'Neill in a bitter ex- change over policy in the Middle East, Reagan told a joint session of.Congress he is determined to keep American for- ces in Lebanon because the United States must never be turned away by "state-sponsored terrorism." Reagan asked the congressional leaders to join him in developing a "down payment" on the federal deficit by enacting "some of the less conten- tious spending cuts" he already has proposed and by closing tax loopholes. leficit But he rejected a major tax boost as a "Band-aid solution to cure an illness that has been coming on for half a cen- tury." The president proposed one costly new item himself- a permanently, manned space station, costing $8 billion over 10 years, "to develop our next; frontier." He asked for a constitutional amen- dment to give him "line item" authority to veto selected congressional projects without killing entire money bills - a power long sought and always -denied his predecessors. And he repeated his support for a so-called balanced budget amendment that would make it more difficult for Congress to approve red- ink spending. Reagan's owri budget plan, See REAGAN, Page 2 Daily Photo by DOUG MCMAHON Housing director Robert Hughes tells a panel of reporters that housing rate hikes may not be as high .as previously expected at Campus Meet the Press yesterday. The event is sponsored by The Michigan Daily and the Canterbury Loft. 'Careers are a crock' ;.:< _ < .. .> . t ;t ,. t . < h .;i., ., By BARBARA MISLE Special to the Daily DETROIT - Stop reading that boring accounting book, future young executives. Put a muzzle on your pre- exam anxiety and listen to some sound advice: Careers are a crock. Or so warns Cathy Crimmins, author of the newest "Official Handbook" to hit bookstore shelves, this one for YAP. - Young Aspiring Professionals. THE GROUP that makes up the bread and butter of the University student population are training to be YAPs. They put their noses to the grin- dstone, and their highlighters to the textbook in hopes of becoming career- people, according to The Official Young Aspring Professional's . Fast-Track Handbook. And students don't realize the trap they're heading for, Crimmins says. Student YAPs follow the road paved by their ancestors of the post-baby- boom generation who now hold middle- management positions and live comfor- tably, sipping Chablis and nibbling sushi while "touching base" with friends. YAPs live in the fast-lane and survive under the motto "Veni, Vidi, priorificavi": I came, I saw, I prioritized. SO WHAT's so dangerous about some pragmatic suburban work-ethic? Ac- cording to Crimmins, YAPs' drive to succeed eventually backfires. "All of us are out there fighting tooth and nail for (middle-management jobs), and it's a given that not all of us are going to make it to the top. "There are only so many people who start out in Chase Manhattan's junior trainee program whp are going to make it to executive vice-president," said the 29- year-old Crimmins. Student YAPs who try to prioritize their personal life the same way they prioritize their study time are also in for a sad surprise, she warns. TODAY'S students "are going to have a mid-life crisis that beats all. They are going to make our see HANDBOOK,.Page 2 By LAURIE DELATER Carolyn Stell will decide if the statute is con- The University will make its first legal move this stitutional, Daane said. He said he didn't know when to res L Q week to challenge a state law which requires it to sell the case would get to court. all investments in business operating in apartheid South Africa, the University's top attorney said INDEPENDENT of the state law, however, the yesterday. University is beginning to sell off stocks in firms 'Sta te General Counsel Roderick Daane said he expects to doing business in South Africa. EZfile a motion in the next few days asking the state at- About $6 million of the $47 million the University torney general for a summary judgement on the law' has invested in those companies has been sold, said S0STATE LEGISLATORS passed the law two years Norman Herbert, the University investment officer. ago in protest against the country's apartheid The University should sell $36 million more by the policies. end of June, he said. The University, however, has said that the law in- The remaining $5 million in stocks are being fringes on the autonomy of the University and is retained so that the University can challenge the law therefore unconstitutional. as an infringement on the University's autonomy. in If the state sttorney general approves the Univer- If Stell should rule against the University, those sity's motion, Ingham County Circuit Court Judge stocks would also have to be sold. ............. ...::.::.::::::.............:........:.............. Squish Daily Photo Hoping there aren't any holes in the soles Qf his boots, this man splashes through one of the mini-ponds on campus yesterday as almost-tropical tem peratures soared into the upper thirties. 7 TODAY race. He said he will keep running for office "until I get elected." Candidates do not need to declare for Bullard's 53d district seat until June, and Jensen is the only announ- ced challenger so far. No more puff, puff PEOPLE WHO FLY Midway Airlines to Chicago or St. Louis this week won't just be offered the routine coffee, tea, or artificial powdered eggs by stewardess. Instead, ceaw'riucc will he nffarrin namnlets nn hnw tn nuit. Midwest hotspot WHO SAYS nothing exciting ever happens in Lincoln, Nebraska? John Wunderlich has big plans for a colossal event that will knock the socks off the lamenting Big Red fans. All he needs are 32,768 people as psyched-up about cribbage as he is. Wunderlich figures as soon as the nation's four million cribbage players learn that he's drawing up plans for a world cribbage tournament with a $1 million first prize. Lincoln will never be the same. Wun- The Daily almanac O N THIS DATE in 1969, the ten-member cast of a UAC play called "Dionysus '69" were arrested for indecent exposure. For the final Sunday performance, the cast played completely unclothed. Also on this date in history: *1944 - A robber made off with $125 of knick knacks from a woman's dorm, including a form-fitted bra, three packages of tootsie rolls-and a bottle of Coke. " 1970 - Studies were internted when the entire oam- Jump for Jensen I