Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom C I be L~tE 43U i Iai1 Drift Cloudy and breezy with a high of 28 and a chance of snow flurries. Nol. XCV, No. 97 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan- Sunday, January27, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages I Reagan to request tudent aid overhaul WASHINGTON (AP)-President Reagan will ask Congress to deny federally guaranteed loans to all college students with family incomes above $32,500, a move which would lock out hundreds of thousands of students from the loan program, an ad- ministration source said yesterday. Reagan's fiscal 1986 budget will also seek to clamp an overall $4,000 per year ceiling on the total federal aid-in- cluding loans and grants-for any student, regardless of how poor his or her family is. The ceiling would also hit graduate students, who can now borrow up to $5,000 a year, twice as much as undergraduates, in guaranteed loans. IAND, IT would restrict eligibility for Pell Grants-outright federal stipends of up to $1,900 a year - to students from families with incomes of $25,000 or less, according to the source, who spoke only pn condition of anonymity. See REAGAN, Page 5 US, s eti USSR date for Radio City? This snowbound kickline of would-be Rockettes are rehearsing in Palmer Field for the outdoor master's dance thesis of Jennifer Jean Clark. The performance will start today at 3 p.m. outside the Dance Building behind the CCRB. Bill may extend scholarships arms WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United States and the Soviet Union have agreed to begin three sets of negotiations on nuclear and space defense weapons on March 12 in Geneva, Switzlerland, the two countries announced simultaneously yesterday. The Kremlin said the Soviet delegation will be headed by Viktor Karpov, who was its main negotiator on the strategic nuclear weapons talks, suspended in late 1983. KARPOV accompanied Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko during his meeting in Geneva Jan. 7-8 with Secretary of State George Shultz. Yuli Kvitsinsky was the Soviet negotiator who discussed the so-called "walk in the woods" formula with veteran arms expert Paul Nitze that would have reduced the superpower medium-range missile arsenals. Both sides apparently rejected the approach. Unlike the U.S., which is bringing in new negotiators for the talks, the Soviets stayed with a familiar team, all of whom are experienced arms negotiators. Ubukhov served as Kar- pov's deputy during the aborted Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START), ALL U.S.-Soviet arms negotiations were broken off by Moscow in Novem- ber 1983 following the deployment of Pershing II and cruise missiles in Europe. President Reagan previously an- nounced the U.S. will be represented by a three-roan delegation, ireludiig Washington lawyer Max Kampelman who will deal with talks on space arms, the so-called "Star Wars" proposal; By RITA GIRARDI If Sen. David Holmes has his way, the University may soon be seeing an abundance of grey-haired ex- athletes at commencement. 'The Detroit Democrat introduced a bill on Jan. 22 that would allow athletes up to 15 years to earn their bachelor's degrees free of charge. The proposed bill would give a student who has earned a varsity letter In football, hockey or basketball the chance to attend classes on full scholarship ten years after their r eligibility had expired. SENATOR HOLMES said he introduced the bill "to protect the athletes." According to Holmes, athletes get little reward for their hours of training and hard work in comparison to the profit the universities nake. "These schools make millions off of these boys, millions," he said. Although the ten-year extension is negotiable, Holmes said it was justified. "The training period is so strenuous ... they don't get enough time to concen- trate ontheir studies," he said. According to Jamie McCloskey, a legal assistant for the National Collegiate Athletic Association, such a law would violate the association's guidelines. Normally an athlete is allowed to participate for four seasons within five years. "The institution couldn't offer aid beyond the five year period," he said. "It would be a problem as far as the NCAA is concer- ned." IF PASSED, the bill could place Michgan univer- sities belonging to the NCAA in a legal catch-22. Mc- Closkey refused to outline what kind of action would take place if the bill were to pass. "I cannot speculate on that," he said. However, Holmes denied that the bill was in violation of NCAA guidelines. "Lawyers are a dime a dozen," he said. "He (McCloskey) was probably wrong." Holmes has proposed that a university's athletic department pick up the tab. According to the Michigan athletic department, an athlete on full scholarship costs about $5,331 a year - for an in-state player. But if that 6'8" center or 285-pound defensive end happens to hail from Tumbleweed Gulch, Texas, the amount jumps to $10,017. This leaves the athletic department with a $150,225 bill after 15 years. NOT SURPRISINGLY, most athletic ad- ministrators are not too pleased with the idea. "I don't think it's effective at all," said Don Canham, the University's athletic director. "We can't provide any more financial aid for the athlete than for the student body," he said. George Hoey, a student advisor, agrees, saying the proposal is "way out of sync with normal expec- tations of students." He added that the move seemed unnecessary in view of the fact that better than 75 percent of the University's athletes graduate within the five-year guidelines of the NCAA. "I'm in favor of helping the kids in any way," said Bill Frieder, Michigan's head basketball coach. However, he said the ten-year extension is "not necessary." According to Frieder, all but one of his 14 players will gradute within the five-year limit. STUDENT ATHLETES had mixed reactions to the proposal. "I'm all for it," said basketball captain Leslie Rockymore. Although the senior center admits that a ten-year extension is going "a little too far," he said the proposal is a good one. "I think it's a nice thing," Rockymore said. "It's a strain to graduate in four years and play athletics.' Raymond Dries, a hockey center in his last yer of eligibility, called the proposal a fair one. "There's been a lot of classes I haven't been ableito take; " he said. "I know if I wasn't playing sports I would have a See STATE, Page 3 talks former Sen. John Tower (R-Texas) who will discuss reduction of long-range strategic missiles (START); and career diplomat Maynard Glitzman who will be chief negotiator on medium range missiles. Kampelman will coordinate the three sets of negotiations. The time and place for the negotiations was arranged through diplomatic channels. Shultz had no plans to return to Geneva for the opening of the talks but will oversee them from Washington. President Reagan told UPI earlier this week he has "some optimism" that an agreement between the superpowers to reduce their nuclear arsenals is possible, but said history proves no one should be "euphoric." NITZE, special adviser to Reagan and Shultz on arms control, told reporters Friday that he expected the United States to put forward some new positions in the next round of talks. But he gave no details. He said Reagan has adopted a new "strategic concept" for the next 10 years that will be the basis of the U.S. position in the coming talks. Nitze expressed some skepticism over the prospects for an agreement. "I think they're somewhat better than they have been in the past but I couldn't really say they're very good," he said. "We've got a lot of work to do." Nitze stressed there are "important differences" between the two countries on the central purpose of the arms talks, particularly Reagan's deter- mination to develop a defensive weapons system in space. CBS crew labors to catch the right angle By DEBRA LADESTRO In a room that would soon be filled with sweating players and screaming fans, the CBS sports crew worked quickly to prepare Crisler Arena for the broadcast of the Michigan v. Kansas basketball game. Men and women dressed in sweaters, jackets, and hats emblazoned with the CBS logo'swarmed about the inside of the arena checking camera angles and charging batteries. Some of the crew were high in the stands attending the large and com- plicated television cameras. Others ran two-and-a-half miles of cable through the building, taping it to the floor and plugging in into sockets. These anonymous workers, whose names flash only briefly on the screen during the final credits, labor many hours to make sure the show runs smoothly. The job requires "not only See T.V., Page 5 4I Middle-aged woman pursues her dream By CARLA FOLZ quit a $32,000 a-year-job for four Clad in faded jeans and a beige grueling years of dental school and the pullover, 44-year-old Doris Allen uncertain future of a new career. slouched back in a couch in the dental "It was always in the back of my school lounge and watched her mind that I wanted to go to medical or classmates leave for the day. Several dental school," Allen said. stopped to chat. She flashed her bright BUT FOR YEARS Allen was satisfied white teeth in a broad smile and joked without realizing those ambitions. She with each of them. married, had two sons, and kept house. "Aw," she said to a woman who In a short time all of that changed. Her marriage fell apart when her children were just two and three o fP le years old. She was forced to enter the job market. She also enrolled In college part-time and eventually earned bachelor's degrees in sociology and :><>: ; .:>:::: ;....::.::;...::...psychology. asked her to watch a bouquet of flowers Over 17 years, Allen worked her way momentarily, "I thought they were for up to a managerial position in a firm me!" owned by the City of Detroit. The firm ALLEN radiates cheerfulness and created incentive programs to contentment. Her warm personality discourage Detroit-based businesses quickly diminishes not only the age gap from fleeing to the suburbs. When she but also the tragic events which distan- left, she was earning $32,000 annually. ce her from her classmates. Her per- DESPITE the job's attractive salary, sonality stems from an inner strength. benefits, and security, Allen grew con- It is with this fortitude that she raised vinced she could find a more self- two boys after her marriage crumbled fulfilling career in the health in 1969. It was fortitude 15 years later profession. And she thought a bigger that pulled her through the sudden paycheck would help pay for her sons' deaths of her sons and spurred her to Daily Photo by KATE O'LEARY Dental student Doris Allen, 44, practices the skills she waited so long to learn on fellow student Betty Burkhart. i - _ -T..ODAY- Draft choice THOMAS PITCHER of Tombstone, Ariz., said he knew the armed services were in need of draftees, but he thought the Selective Service System had gone too far when it asked him to fill out a draft form. Pitcher is 81 years old and a retired Army colonel to boot. "I knew it.......,..,..~~~~t.--4 ... __,mn11Tinhrcm"hiltdid' . Lifelong friends ThE TERM "LIFELONG FRIENDS" has special meaning for Carol Mansfield and Chip Stalter of Hillsdale, N.J., who plan to marry in March. The two were introduced 25 years ago in their mothers' hospital maternity ward. "We got introduced as, 'This is the couple that met the day they were born,' " said Mansfield, a housing administrator for Fairfield University in Connecticut. The couple say they get plenty of ribbing from family and friends about being "maternity ward rommates." Both were born Oct. 21, 1959, 200-hour "Back orgy" to mark the 300 anniversary of the birth of Johann Sebastian Bach and is billing it as the most "complete presentation of Bach's music in history." "Some people are trying to stay up for as much as they can but we don't advise that they stay up for the whole thing," said programming director Michael Rosenberg. Students start getting "cranky" after about 30 listening hours, he said. The radio station's tastes are a bit eclectic. Later this year, students will make the switch from 16th century classical music to hard rock from the 1970s and '80s when the station gives them a 24-hour dose of Led Zeppelin. video tape aired Friday night on WJLA-TV showed Sinatra, known for his angry outbursts, and his entourage at the downtown center, where he was rehearsing for the presidential extravaganzas. The full text of the exchange went like this: "Listen, I wanna tell you something. Did you read the Post this afternoon? You're all dead, everyone of you. You're all dead, every one of you." On the inside... The Opinion Page looks at The Week in Review... and Snnr~ti nvers the Wolverines' effort to chalk tin a rare I; .I