Ninety-five Years Of Editorial Freedom :J- Sir4 ~IaI&t! Sunshine Sunny, calm, and mild with a high near 50. Vol. XCV, No. 124 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 9, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Report addresses campus rape By KERY MURAKAMI In a report obtained yesterday by the Daily, two University committees outline seven recommendations for dealing with sexual assault on campus, including the establishment of a sexual assault hotline and the creation of a central University office to deal with the problem. The Campus Safety Committee and the Student Relations Subcommittee of the University Sexual Harassment Committee submitted the report to Henry Johnson, University vice president for student services, on Feb. 27. Johnson's office is currently reviewing the report and is expected to comment on it next week. MARVIN PARNES, assistant direc- tor of University housing, and a mem- ber of one of the committees, said that the object of the report is to "address the concerns of the problems of sexual assault." He said the report stayed away from making specific suggestions for carrying out the recommendations because that should be done "by the people responsible for implementing them ." The report addresses several of the concerns expressed by University protesters who sat-in at Johnson's of- fice in January to protest his comments on the University's sexual assault policy which appeared in a Detroit magazine. These include recommendations for blue lights to be installed above emergency phone lines over the next year which would directly connect the user to the University's Department of Public Safety. The report calls for bet- ter use and maintainance of campus lighting fixtures. Centralization of services to deal with sexual assault is another way the University can improve the way it deals with the issue, according to the report. "THE UNIVERSITY should establish a single, visible office to serve as a central focus and coordination point for sexual assault services," the report said. "One weakness of the University community is the lack of coordination and centralization of ser- vices," which results in confusion "as See REPORT, Page 3 PSN trial produces hung jur y Graphic graffiti Daily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER A passerby glances at the Main Street graffiti of Jennifer Akfirst, an LSA senior, and Mary Jane Emanoil, a 21-year-old Ann Arbor woman. The two, who were arrested and charged with malicious destruction of property, will go to a pre- trial hearing on April 9th. Although they wouldn't give the reason for their handiwork, it appears to be a reaction to the billboard's sexist advertisement. Memo reveals cost for minority recrutment p By CHARLES SEWELL District Court Judge George Alexan- der declared a mistrial yesterday in the case of seven members of the Progressive Student Network arrested last March for trespassing on Univer- sity property. A new trial date, May 9, was set after the jury was unable to reach "a unanimous decision. But if a recently established ruling governing jury selec- tion cannot be overturned before the new trial, the case may be dropped, ac- cording to Lynwood Noah, the prosecuting attorney. ON MARCH 6, 1984 members of the PSN were arrested for trespassing when they blockaded the research laboratory of electrical engineering Prof. George Haddad to protest campus military research. The research Had- dad is conducting in his 'East Engineering laboratory is sponsored by the Department of Defense and has military applications, according to the project's contract. After both attorneys presented their cases Thursday, the jury deliberated for 31/z hours that afternoon and again for one hour yesterday morning before concluding that they could not reach a unanimous decision. Juror Gilbert Lee, a University op- tomology researcher, said the six- member jury was split four to two in favor of a guilty verdict. LEE, HOWEVER, sympathized with the demonostrators. He said the protesters did not commit a crime by holding the fit-in, but rather an act of social responsibility. "The trespass statute was a cop-out" in this case Lee said. Lee said the issue of nuclear weapons is very significant, and the University See PROSECUTOR, Page 2 By SEAN JACKSON Recommendations for improving the recruitment and retention of minority students made by Associate Vice President for Academic affairs Niara Sudarkasa will cost the University $427,000 during the first year of implementation and will ultimately cost $2.28 million annually, according to a memo obtained by the Daily yesterday. The recommen- dations were part of a 57-page report authored by Sudarkasa in October. The memo contains the financial costs of these recommen- dations. It was written by Sudarkasa. It calls for funding of four new office positions, expanded minority recruitment, and enlargement of financial aid offers. BUT ACCORDING TO MSA president Scott Page, the budget outlined in the memo will change. He said the budget has been altered because "there was a problem with the budget according to (University President Harold) Shapiro." Page said he does not know why the budget has been changed. It could be anything, from an adding mistake to figuring the number of students effected incorrectly. Page said MSA dies not have any details on the revised budget. Vice President for Academic Affairs and University Provost Billy Frye, refused to comment on the report. THE NEW budget is expected to be released as early as Monday, along with the official release of Sudarkasa's report and the University's annual affirmative action report, and executive officers' recommendations on Sudarkasa's plan. In order for all minorities to be fully represented at the University, Sudarkasa recommends in the report that all qualified in-state minority students receive financial aid awards of $5,500 a year. The first year costs discussed in the memo represent how much is needed to implement Sudarkasa's recommen- dations. The ultimate costs are based on the assumption that these funds will have to be paid out for four years and that 90 percent of the students involved will graduate and 80 percent will continue to show need for aid. SUDARKASA'S memo states that $292,000 will-be needed during the first year of this financial aid program. It will ultimately expand to $2.14 million annually. See MINORITY, Page 2 MSA delays filing suit over r, By STEVEN E.IHERZ After meeting with lawyers from the Ann Arbor chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union yesterday, the Michigan Student Assembly postponed a decision to file suit against the University, which has refused to publicly release documents concerning minority affairs. The Michigan Daily, which had also considered suing the University under the state Freedom of Information Act to obtainrthe minority affairs report, also put off a decision after speaking with ACLU officials. THE APPROXIMATELY 57-page report, prepared by Niara Sudarkasa, eport an associate vice president for academic affairs, analyzes the Univer- sity's problems with undergraduate minority recruitment and retention. It also suggests several remedies to the problems, including a proposal to sup- ply all qualified in-state minority students with financial aid awards of $5,500 per year. The University has denied several requests by MSA and the Daily to make the report public' contending that the information ir the report is preliminary and would be misunderstood by the public. Under state law, a document can be kept from the public if it is See MSA, Page 5 R I f h f c s v f I r s N Cl e t 'U'officials fear rejection of fund By JERRY MARKON grant proposals from almost all of the University officials believe the nation's top engineering schools. Ap- National Science Foundation will reject proximately $10 million will be made available for fiscal 1985, he said. the engineering college's request for a NSF spokesman Dr. William $26.1 million grant to study robots and SFurg oesh nDr iliam perform research for automotive com- Spurgeon said the foundation has made no official announcement and he paries.srefused to comment on the University's however, maintain that the Univer status while the proposals are still sity's request hasn't been turned down being reviewed. HE ADDED that the foundation will yet and that no decisions on the grant announce the winners of the grant ENGINEERING Assistant Dean for sometime in the middle of April. Engineering School Associate Dean iesearch, Daniel Atkinis and other of- Charles Vest said he believes the depar- icials involved in the project say they tment's proposal directly addressed the aven't received an official rejection concerns laid out by the NSF. rom the NSF. However, Prof. Kan "The NSF was looking for a research ;hen, one of the proposal's supporters, proposal that would promote strong in- aid the fact that the NSF has not yet terdepartmental ties, would involve at isited the University's present least 10 percent of the college's faculty, acilities is a bad sign. and that would encourage strong "(It is) the strongest indication that academic ties to industry," Vest said. we won't get the grant," he said. HE ADDED that he thought the Purdue University, Northwestern engineering college's proposal University, University of Florida, and provided for all of these elements. The University of Delaware, all But Martin Tobin, associate director eceived visits from the NSF, Atkins for academic affairs in the University's said. Office of Research, said a lack of IT IS believed schools which receive private funding to supplement the grant 4SF visits become finalists in grant may have weakened the package. ompetition, Atkins said. "We just couldn't match the kinds of According to Chen, an electrical dollars. other schools were coming up ngineering and computer science prof. he NSF has received 142 research See SCIENCE, Page 3 Blanchard signs new state seat belt law at 'U' By GREG MEENAHAN Michigan became the nation's fourth state to enact a mandatory seatbelt law yesterday when Gov. James Blanchard signed the law into effect at the University's Transportation Research Institute. "With the signing of this bill, Michigan takes a giant step towards reducing the terrible toll taken by traf- fic accidents on our roads and high- ways," Blanchard said. THE LAW, effective July 1, will im- pose fines of $10 for drivers and front seat automobile passengers who fail to wear seatbelts. The fine will jump to $25 Jan. 1. The law includes a measure to prevent police from stopping a motorist solely for failing to wear seatbelts. No points are added to drivers' records for failure to wear seatbelts. BLANCHARD quoted experts as saying that the law could reduce car See GOV, Page 2 Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH LSA senior Marta Stein shakes hands with Gov. Blanchard at yesterday's signing of the state bill mandating use of seatbelts in the University's Transportation Research Institute. To the left is LSA senior Debbie Schrayer, and to the right are Business Administration senior Jane Caplan and LSA senior Gayl Marans. The four girls were involved in an accident when their cars turned over on I-95 en route to Chicago. They received awards for wearing their seatbelts. TODAY Bye-bye birdie FITTV OiFT AT in Tumln Mi sare hnning thev can say will start their northward migration a bit early. City Plan- ning Officer Larry McLendon said Monday the ground ap- parently is dry enough to begin cutting the trees. He plans to cut five, 50-foot wide swaths through the grove in the hope that will remove the wind protection the birds seek. McLendon hopes that will send the birds heading north on their annual migration, although he's cautious about the outcome. He said if it did not work, he would move to "phase two" but did not define what that would be. Burning up Residents of Yuba City, California ranked lowest in Rand McNally's "Places Rated Almanac," burned 400 to 500 Rand McNally maps in a bonfire, but kept its protest upbeat. "We intend to have as much fun with this as we can," said Don McCullough, president of the co-sponsoring Yuba City New Car Dealers Association, as the bonfire got ranked the Yuba City area 329th among 329 urban areas nationwide of 100,000 or more population. The survey, which called Pittsburgh the most desirable city in the nation, ranked cities in nine categories: climate, crime, economy, housing costs, transportation, health care facilities, education, arts and recreation. I I I I