Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom C I bt Sir 43f ati Boom Scattered showers and thunder showers, with highs in the 70s. i Vol. XCV, No. 36 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, October 17, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Mondale to visit campus Tuesday By MARCY FLEISHER Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale will visit the Univer- sitt next week, an official from his Campaign said last night. John Austin, a member of Mondale's team who is currently in Ann Arbor organizing the campaign stop, said the former vice president "will definitely ddress the University community next Tuesday. MONDALE will make an appearance in Ann Arbor after a stop in Youngstown, Ohio. The exact time and location have, not been decided at this time. Austin said the rally would be outdoors. Members of Mondale's team will meet with University President Harold i Shapiro this morning to determine the time and site for the rally. Campaign officials would prefer to have the event around 1 or 1:30 p.m. in "an area that is frequently traveled by students," Austin said. At last night's Michigan Student Assembly meeting, President Scott .Page informed the assembly about the 'visit. MSA unanimously passed a resolution inviting any major presiden- See MONDALE, Page 3 U-Club to meet on violations response From staff reports The University Club Board of Direc- tors will decide in a meeting Oct. 26 how it will respond to two liquor license violations the bar has received this year, the board president said yester- day. The board was expected to respond after meeting last Friday, but can- celled its meeting when the Daily editor-in-chief and a reporter tried to get in. PROF. CHARLES Lehmann, president of the board, said Friday that the board is a private body and would See U-CLUB, Page 3 Tutu, from AP and UPI OSLO, Norway - Black Anglican Bishop Desmond Tutu won the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize yesterday for his passionate but peaceful "heroism" in leading a non-violent crusade against South Africa's system of racial discrimination. With its decision, the Norwegian Nobel Committee restated a position it first took a quarter-century ago, when it honored Tutu's black countryman Albert John Lutuli: that people who work for human rights work for peace. "THE WORD 'peace' is more and more considered a matter of human rights," committee Chairman Egil Aarvik said after announcing the award to the anti-apartheid leader. "If human rights are violated in any place of the world, ... a peace would not be real or would not last." Tutu, 53, said in New York City where he is a visiting professor at the General Theological Seminary that he would accept the $190,000 award on behalf of "all those who have been involved in the liberation struggle, working for a new society in South Africa." Tutu has strived peacefully to eliminate South African apartheid - the institutional racial segregation and discrimination of the nation's 22 million blacks by the 4.5 million whites. He is seen as that nation's Martin Luther King, Jr., who won the award 20 years ago. "The committee has attached impor- tance to Desmond Tutu's role as a unifying leading figure in the campaign to resolve the problems of apartheid in South Africa," the Norwegian Nobel Committee said in announcing the award. TUTU IS despised by the right-wing Afrikaner establishment in South Africa but has also been criticized by some black extremists for being too moderate. Tutu, whose home is in the black township of Soweto, was the second black South African to win the award. The Peace Prize for 1960 was reser- ved and awarded the year after to Albert Luthuli, head of the African National Congress who fought against apartheid, which was instituted in 1948 when the Afrikaner National Party came to power. Although some easing of South Africa's racial laws has occurred in wins Nobel Prize Associated Press Nobel Peace Prize winner Bishop Desmond Tutu listens to a question during a news conference after the announcement of the award at the General Theological Seminary in New York. Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL Falling at her feet LSA freshwoman Darlene Carrol sits among autumn's fallen leaves by the Natural Science Building. recent years, the plight of blacks there has changed little since Luthuli's award. Tutu's selection was a clear call by the Nobel Committee for the elimination of apartheid. "THIS YEAR'S award should be seen as a renewed recognition of the courage and heroism shown by black South Africans in their use of peaceful methods in the struggle against apar- theid," the five-member awarding committee said. Asked later if the Committee wanted this award to influence the situation in South Africa, Committee Chairman Egil Aarvik said, "Yes". Tutu was expected to arrive in Johannesburg tomorrow for four days "to go and celebrate with the people." Tutu supporters said they did not ex- pect the government to restrict his movements. The bishop has been jailed and his passport revoked. He currently is traveling on temporary documents, but the Pretoria government would not say Tuesday if it will allow him to come to Oslo to collect his peace prize in December. College board candidates lament high tuition costs f .. 7 i D By LAURIE DELATER AND ERIC MATTSON Special to the Daily DETROIT - Candidates for the governing boards on Michigan's three largest universities last night lamented rising tuition costs and declining state aid to higher education. But their solutions to changing the recent trend in college funding ranged from pushing for more state dollars to abolishing public colleges. "THE COSTS of education are becoming delplorable and prohibitive," said Neal Nielsen, a Republican candidate for U-M board of regen- ts. "U-M is one of the gems of our state. If our people cannot take advantage of it, then what good is it?" Nielsen and 12 other regental candidates spoke at a public forum last night at Wayne State University. NIELSEN, A Brighton lawyer, advocated increased funding through private business sponsorship of research and development at the University. Robert Nederlander, a two-term regent of the University emphasized private gifts as an alter- native to state aid. Nederlander (Detroit) chairs the University's capital campaign to raise $160 million from private sources. He noted that a decade ago tuition revenue composed a third of the University's general fund budget. Today, that figure is 43 percent. Un- til the state reverses that trend, Nederlander said governing boards will continue to hike tuition. "NOBODY WANTS to raise tuition, but I do it almost every year," he told the audience. But rather than operate under the whims of legislators drawing up the state budget, Michigan State University libertarian candidate Thomas Jones proposed severing colleges financial ties with the state completely. "Given the option, I would vote to abolish Michigan State University as a public in- stitution," Jones said. THE CANDIDATES also discussed the political maneuvering behind the party can- didate selection proces. University Regent Gerald Dunn (D-Garden City) failed to win renomination on the state Democratic party ticket last September. Some pin the blame on leaders of the United Auto Workers who disagreed with Dunn's work as a lobbyist for state schools. "When I look at what happened to Gerry ... I don't think that is appropriate," Nielsen said. Nielsen added, regents might not be free to make choices about what's best for the college if they have special interest groups at their backs. "Nederlander refused to say whether behind the scenes politicking actually took place at the state party convention. "Gerry Dunn is a very qualified person. Marj Lansing is a very qualified person. All I can say is that Iran my own race," he said. Nielsen suggested that similar tactics were used to unseat MSU's trustee Blanch Martin this fall. But Charles Vincent, a Democrat who some say replaced Martin, said Nielsen's assertion showed "a lack of homework." "I'm not working for the Democratic party, but I'm not dissociating myself either." $5000 tour the world grant up for grabs By STEPHANIE DEGROOTE How would you like someone to hand you $5,000 and tell you to go around the world to study international human relations? Every other year since 1980, a University student has gotten just such an oppor- tunity through the Circumnavigators Club Foundation, an international organization of world travellers. PAUL MORELAND, a member of the club, said that there are certain restric- tions on the way the money is used. "One must make a complete circum- navigation of the globe in one direction, cutting all meridians in either the north or south pole, all in one trip and the trip must be for goodwill," said Moreland, who has circled the world twice. /~ The club has given the grants since 1967. Most of the grants had gone to students of Georgetown University, un- See $5000, Page 2 I TODAY- LiKely Story are there. But it wasn't easy for Enyart to face her friends or the insurance agent. "He didn't stop laughing for 10 minutes, " she said. "Then he asked me how much I had to drink. Down at work they tell me my story should be nominated for 'Ripley's Believe It or Not.' " When the ac- cident occured, around 11:55 p.m. Wednesday, Ms. Enyart said she knew instantly who to blame. "I got home and told my husband a beaver dropped a tree on the car," she said. "It dented the hood and the roof, smashed the windshield, and creased the whole right side of the car." She explained volunteers would be confined to huts, venturing outside only after taking the precautions similar to what they might need to survive on the red planet. They would bring sup- plies to start off, but would to grow their own food. Lord Young says he has found 15 volunteers, all from Great Britain or Australia. All he needs now is the cash to finance the venture - about $490,000. Pandemonium chin and hands. "They looked very embarrassed when they realized they'd landed in the middle of a costume party." At first, the party-goers thought the officers "were more guys in costume;" she said. The officers left shortly thereafter. ' i I {