obody does it better See Weekend Magazine Ninety-four Years ltv E pluribu ynu Iof l2 d AIJ Cloudy, windy, and scattered showers. High of 53. Editorial Freedom Wg 9 The g Dg An Arbo Vol. XCI V-No. 155 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan -Friday, April 13 1984 Fifteen Cents Sixteen Pages Big Ten Playboy hopefuis 'op into the hutch By SUE BARTO Preppies, punkers, and one stripper showed up at a Campus Inn hotel room yesterday for a chance to be one of the "Girls of the Big Ten," in Playboy's September issue. "WHAT THE hell, it's crazy," said SA junior theresa Sargent, who brought along her roommate. "We psyched each other up... We didn't sit down and ponder it or try to rationalize it, wejust said, 'let's do it!' " SARGENT and her roommate, LSA junior Erica Walz, both decked out in miniskirts and plenty of make-up, gave their measurements and biographical information to Playboy photographer David Chan, who took Polaroid snap- hots of them. See PLAYBOY, Page 3 State Senate approves merit scholarships From staff and wire reports The State Senate yesterday approved a college scholarship package which University officials say will help attract the state's top-- notch students. The program, based solely on high school students' test scores - not family income - was approved 29-5. If passed by the House, it. will establish a $500 yearly grant for state Students who score in the top 8 percent of the American College Testing exam. It will benefit about 5,000 students yearly. THE MERIT-BASED scholarship was proposed by Gov. James Blanchard last year to reward high achievers regardless of family income. Backers of the plan say it will keep talented students in state colleges, and University officials agree. According to Richard Kennedy, the Univer- sity's vice president for state relations, the program will serve as an incentive for top- notch students to attend the University, in- stead of travelling to out of state schools that offer attactive scholarship plans. "It is an incentive for a lot of people in high school to be attentive to GPAs and that sort of thing," Kennedy said. HOWEVER, HE said that while the program could encourage students to attend the University administrators are somewhat hesitant about it. "(There is) still an enor- mous (need for) financial aid for needy students," Kennedy said. "Until we make it possible for (all students) to come to the University...we are a little hesitant about this kind of program." Some kind of need factor should be included See STATE, Page 5 Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF LSA juniors Theresa Sargent, left, and Erica Walz, show some skin for Playboy photographer David Chan yesterday in the Presidential Suite of the Campus Inn. The roommates are auditioning for Playboy's September issue, "Girls of the Big Ten." They all scream for ice cream .n,,.« .. ..' : . .a vU .rib,.,ta ' . By MICHELLE BEZAI Spring temperatures that send students flocking to local ice cream spots for some cool relief are also brewing some hot competition between the scoopers behind the counters. Ann Arbor's seven ice cream stores are fighting hard for customers by trying to keep their products a scoop above the rest. AND BETWEEN finicky customer tastes and an increasingly specialized ice cream market, selling a cone just isn't as easy as it used to be. Gone are the simple flavors of vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry while such modern dazzlers as can- taloupe, mocha chip and Oreo cookie rule today's ice cream roost. Today's ice cream can come squashed delightfully between two cookies, or cookies can come delight- fully squashed in ice cream. Sundaes previously limited to slender fountain glasses now can be slurped on the run in an oversized waffle cone. THE ONLY simple fact remaining in the modern world of ice cream is that people still love to lick the stuff. And some ice cream sellers are taking ad- ,vantage of that all-American passion by charging more than a dollar for'a mere single scoop. Newcomer to the Ann Arbor ice cream market Bill Costello, who owns Cafe Fiore near the corner of State and See SUN, Page 5 Daily Photo by REBECCA KNIGHT Leo Heatley, assistant director of the University's Department of Public Safety and Security, plans to seek the Washtenaw County Sheriff's seat being vacated by Sheriff Tom Minick. 'Usecurity official Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Although there are at least seven places in Ann Arbor where ice cream fanatics can get their fix lickety-split, vendors of the frosty stuff, like this Lovin' Spoonfull worker, say there 's been no dip in business. No need to tax tuition waiver, GEO says By THOMAS MILLER Representatives of the graduate teaching assistants' union have obtained a document that they believe may solve the four-month-old problem of tuition waiver taxation. According to the Graduate Employees' Organization, an Internal Revenue Service document implies that the University should not withhold taxes on the one-third tuition break that TAs receive under their contract with the University. UNTIL THIS year, a federal law had exempted the tuition waiver from being taxed, but the law expired in December when Congress failed to reinstate the measure. As a result, TAs have had to play an average of .$75 a month more in taxes while waiting for Congress to act. On Wednesday, the House passed the bill containing the tuition exemption by a vote of 318-97, but similar legislation has yet to pass in the Senate. EVEN IF THE Senate doesn't pass the tax bill, GEO believes the IRS document means the University should not be withholding the taxes. The IRS document states: "The Treasury Department and the (IRS) will not issue any regulations or rulings altering the tax treatment of nonstatutory fringe benefits prior to January 1, 1985. Present administrative practice will not be changed during this period." The union will present the document to the University at a meeting next Wednesday, and ask the University to stop the withholdings. "OUR HOPE IS that based on the IRS ruling, the University will realize that they've made a big mistake," said GEO treasurer Rick Matland. "The ruling, coupled with the fact that the University of Michigan is the only university in the country withholding, will hopefully lead to a quick resolution of the problem." "I really feel that finding the IRS ruling is a breakthrough. The ruling is so clear," Matland added. "IT SAYS that there are to be no changes in the way fringe benefits are being taxed. A big question is why hasn't the University acted on this before? Were they even aware of the ruling?" he said. University officials say, however, that the union's See TUITION, Page 2 may earn sheriff's job By MARK SMALLWOOD In two weeks; one University official hopes to be working outside the con- fines of Angell Hall, the Diag and the UGLi. Washtenaw County will pick a new interim sheriff soon, and Leo Heatley, the assistant director of the University's Department, of Public Safety and Security, hopes to get the job. In case he doesn't, he is cam- paigning for the position in the fall. Tom Minick, the current sheriff, is leaving the job April 20, and the county will appoint an interim sheriff until January when the winner of Novem- ber's election will take over. "I THINK a lot of Tom Minick," Heatley said, "and I wouldn't be doing much differently than he is doing now." If he's elected in November, Heatley said he 'would like to see the 911 emergency phone call system expan- ded. "I would strive to make it county- wide. Right now we only have 911 in Ann Arbor. There is none in the west of the county," he said. Heatley said he also wants to establish more, self-defense and rape preventionaworkshops in the county. ONE ASPECT of working in the Safety Department Heatley said he will not miss is having to deal with proposed student code of non-academic conduct. The code; which Heatley sup- ports, would allow the University to See 'U', Page 5 -TODAY Finished ODAY'S DAILY IS the last paper of the term in nrvdr tn iUe 7zmhi-eved staffers :a chance to farming community in Hygiene, Colo. Farmers say they can yell, object, and chase the thieves off their fields, but they just keep coming back - and sometimes it's the far- mers themselves who end up in trouble. Bev Platt, who lives south of the town, says last year she yelled at a man to get off her land, while she was holding a broom in her hand. He told police she had a gun. She was tried and convicted for pointing a gun and is now on probation for that crime. "We've never owned a gun, but I wish my broom had been loaded," Platt said. She now has a large sign posted by her asparagus patch that says: "Asparagus Pickers Beware of The Daily almanac O N THIS DATE in 1955 the State Senate voted 23-2 to change the name of Michigan State College to Michigan State University of Agriculture and Applied Science. Officials here at the University, however, said they were not pleased with the change because the name sounded too similar to the University of Michigan. Gov. Mennen Williams backed the vote saying that "the state of Michigan is certainly big enough for two state-supported universities." magazine, a monthly California-based liberal publication, charged that the MSU aid project served as a front for the CIA and violated the 1954 Geneva agreement. But MSU officials said they promptly fired CIA agents when the officials'. identity was revealed and dropped the aid program. 1982 ' Security officials from the Michigan Union reported that they confiscated a number of beverages - some of which were alcoholic - from the offices of the Michigan Student Assembly. According ,to an anonymous source, officials took a case of Michelob beer, a bottle of wina - at- n ayso r 7l romn -e1Prtadnremide i I I I