Inside: Swing into I I basebal- Ninety-five Years~~ Wormy Epe t rfe rsCloud y w it h c a ce o how ers. Editorial FreedomX , .yT High in the low to mid-60s. Vol. XCV, No. 140 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, March 28, 1985 Fifteen Cents Fourteen Pages Academic probation disciplines students By STEVEN LEIKEN Denny Matecun, an engineering school senior and residence advisor, came to the University three years ago as a self-proclaimed cocky high school graduate. He recalls how he thought his - near 4.0 G.P.A. guaranteed him an easy ride through college. But Matecun's first semester was anything but a piece of cake. Hie received a 1.8 G.P.A. and a form letter notifying him that he had been placed on academic probation. 1. . . Since your term grade point average was below the 2.0 required to be in good standing, you have been placed, on academic probation," read the letter Matecun found in his mailbox. "I came here thinking it was a piece of cake," says Matecun as he reflects on his disastrous first term freshman year grades. "I expected it to be a lot closer to high school than it ended up being. "Probation scared me. It made me Council candidates prepare for election By ARONA PEARLSTEIN First in a two-part series With city elections less than a week away, both the Democratic and Republican parties are heating up their fight for control of the Ann Arbor City Council. This year is more crucial than ever since it gives the Democrats a strong chance for control of the traditionally Republican-dominated council. The Republicans have no challenger to First Ward Democratic incumbent Lowell Peterson, which gives the Democrats a head start in the elections. THE DEMOCRATS have made af- fordable housing one of their key con- cerns during the campaign. Jeff Epton, the Third Ward Democratic incumbent, advocates stablizing the existing housing market and encouraging developers to become involved in state subsidy programs that increase affor- dable housing for low-income people. "Th ere s a (state) program that will loan money below the market interest See CITY, Page 5 get more serious," Matecun says. "I came here saying I'd settle for a 3.5. Af- ter two semesters, I changed that to get- ting through U. of M. with a degree." . LIKE MATECUN, Taaj Suri, an engineering sophomore, overestimated Michigan. "I expected it to be harder. . . The first semester I glided through on what I learned in high school." His second and third terms he says he tried to do the same. "I got exactly what I deserved," Suri says. "I haven't put my best foot forward." Matecun's and Suri's cases are not unusual. Many students come to the University from' top-notch nigh schools thinking that they can slide by on their past achievements and lacking the serious motivation and hard work that it takes to be an academic success. According to Assistant Dean of Engineering Leland Quackenbush, the roots of .poor grades are also often found in personal problems, but he says "usually the lack of motivation" is instrumental in bringing down grades. "The students we accept are capable of succeeding," he adds. Of the 13,788 LSA students and the 4,000 engineering students, last fall 10.7 for poor academic performace. The majority of these students were of, junior and sophomore class standing,67 and 70 respectively. Only 53 were seniors and .27 were freshmen. The engineering school did not have the 'Probation scared me. It made me get more serious. I came here saying I'd settle for a 3.5. After two semesters, I changed that to getting through U. of M. with a degree.' -Denny Matecun engineering school senior board which administers academic discipline, says three things can happen after a .student is first placed on probation. According to Crafton, probation will be lifted if the student has an overall and semester G.P.A. over 2.0 for the next semester; the student will be placed on continued probation if his next semester's G.P.A. is over 2.0 but the overall average remains below that level; or the student will be dismissed from the University.. In LSA, after two semesters on probation a student can be dismissed, while the engineering school allows three semesters. If the second or third semester of probation occurs during the fall semesters, the student may be given anouther semester before enrollment is denied. THOUGH LSA students are only permitted two semesters, the "two semesters isn't as rigidly enforced as it was a few years ago," says Crafton. In addition, Assistant Dean of LSA Eugene Nissen says "we might set special terms for individual students." In LSA, freshman and transfer students are given a little leeway during their first term. This leeway is "very subjective," according to Nissen. "There are adjustment problems and we try to take that into consideration," he says. Students who use up their probationary periods must face a hearing board to determine their status. This procedure gives students the chance to petition the University for readmittance, according to Crafton. In their letters to the board, students can spell out why they deserve a second chance, she says. But-once the bard decides to dismiss a student, that is the final word, says See ACADEMIC, Page 3 percent of engineers and 4.6 percent of LSA students were placed on academic probation for failing to maintain a C average in their classes that semester.. AFTER THE 1984 winter semester, 249 students were dismissed from LSA numbers broken down by class stan- ding. The University's policy for academic discipline varies slightly depending on the school involved. Helen Crafton, head of the LSA Academic Actions TAs union to consider terms of new contract ,By BARBARA LOECHER Members of the TAs union will meet tonight to discuss the terms of a ten- tative contract agreement reached by the University and the union last Friday. TAs worked for two weeks on an extended contract while they waited for University and union officials to negotiate a settlement at the bargaining table. The contract, which still must be ap- proved by members of the Graduate Employees' Organization (GEO), in- cludes a 50 percent tuition waiver and a five percent salary increase for teaching and research assistants, ac- cording to Union President Jane Holzka. HOLZKA SAID thtat the ballots mailed out to union members this weekend should be returned to the GEO office by April 19 at the latest. GEO is expected to announce the results of the vote on the contract April 22, she said. Although the TAs union has favored a 100 percent tuition waiver in the past, Holzka has said she is "particularly pleased" with the monetary benefits recognized in the contract. She said that under thq terms of the previous contract, only 40 percent of TAs tuition costs were waived. The tentative contract authorizes the addition of several non-monetary benefits. GEO won a stipulation in the contract for discussion oftworking con- ditions between department chairs and TAs and a clause requiring departments to provide English language assistance for TAs to whom English is a second language. UNIVERSITY officials refused to comment on the terms of the contract. "The less said the better," said Dan Gamble, University personnel manager and a member of the Univer- sity bargaining team. Chief negotiator for the University, Colleen Dolan- Greene noted that it is contrary to University policy to discuss a contract before it is ratified. Although only union members will vote to ratify the contract, the agency shop clause in the union's contract requires all TAs to support the union financially. Union members are assessed "membership dues" and non- members are charged "representation fees," though Holzka said the differen- ce between the dues and the fees is nominal. A provision in the proposed contract, designed to reduce the paperwork bur- don on union workers, requires TAs who intend to join GEO to indicate their intent by checking the appropriate box on a "dues" card. Those who do not wish to become GEO members are not required to complete the card. ndthey'reo ffa iDily Photo by KATE O'LEARY And te eof... The pouring rain didn't stop students from coming out to watch Greek Week's Phi Psi 500 tricycle race yesterday. A crowd of 300 gather to watch students slurp slabs of jello, drink beer through straws and ride tricycles around the course in front of the Zeta Tau Alpha house. Tonight's Greek event is the 7:00 p.m. variety show at Hill Auditorium. Direct maling targets students By LAURA BISCHOFF Dear Joe Student: J . C. Penney likes to give credit where credit is due! And because you're on the way to the top, you deserve a charge account with a store in tune with your lifestyle. That's why J. C. Penny has a pre- approved charge account reserved for you. . University students - especially upperclassmen - open up their mailboxes every day to stacks of credit card applications, catalogues, and other forms of "junk mail" addressed specifically to them. DIRECT MAIL marketing captures 70 percent of the American advertising dollar today. It's a big selling channel for practically every kind of capitalistic venture there is. Great, you say, but how the heck do these businesses know who you are and that you are a stud- ent? Your name gets around. From the moment Mom and Dad call you junior, your name and age is public information and probably is placed on a mailing list of some sort. THE UNIVERSITY is prohibited by a regental policy from selling or giving away student data, but that doesn't mean businesses won't find out who and where you are. Mailing lists are compiled by insurance and credit companies, magazine publishers, census takers, telephone companies, and even the Michigan Secretary of State's Office. These firms compile information on computers, organize.it into demographic categories, and sell the materials from $40 to $80 per thousand names. Aetna National, one such list company, has 72 million people on its residential files alone. PLENTY OF organizations are interested in pur- chasing these lists. The United States Armed Forces, for example, order lists for 12 to 15 cents per name from the Secretary of State's file of registered drivers. The military's prime target for recruitment are the nation's 18-to 26-year olds, the names of whom are pumped out of each state's giant computer. "The law requires that we sell (names and info- rmation) for a price," said Ed Boucher of the secretary of state's office in Lansing. Revenue from the sale is used for highway improvements. A com- plete list of all the registered drivers in Michigan - 5 or 6 million people - would cost nearly $90,000, Boucher says. In addition to the military, insurance companies and R. L. Polk, a mailing list firm which provides in- formation on auto owners whose cars must be recalled, also buy information from the secretary of state's office. BOUCHER SAID the secretary of state officials are trying to amend that law, part of the Michigan Vehicle Code, so that the mailing lists can only be sold tonon-commercial organizations. Getting an accurate list of college students is dif- ficult, though certainly not impossible. Since students are so transient and the University withholds information on them, the only way firms can compile a list of this year's student body is by copying the student directory. Indeed; many large firms buy issues of the directory just for that pur- pose. But this process is too inefficient for smaller firms such as Michigan Document Services located on E. William Which lists Washtenaw County residen- ts and businesses. "WE'VE TALKED to the University several times nicely (without success)," said Michigan Document Services owner Jim Smith. "But eventually we'll make (student mailing lists) available one way or another." Smith sees a potentially large market for mailing lists of University students, particularly for local pizza See JUNK, Page 2 Audit revecdls medical loan program- abuses WASHINGTON (AP) - Medical and dental students, eligible for up to $80,000 in government-backed school loans, have used the program to pay for new cars, divorce lawyers, and even a trip to Europe while soaring default rates threaten the program with bankruptcy, auditors said yesterday. The internal audit by the inspector general of the Health and Human Ser- vices Department said that unlike most loan programs, the medical program has treated the loans as virtually an ab- solute right of students, with little regard for where the money is going, whether it is needed or whether it is likely to be repaid. THE PROGRAM has suffered abuses as a result, the audit said. While an emergency increase in insurance premiums averted bankruptcy this year, the audit report said, more changes must be made "to prevent the deficiencies from crippling the program and undermining program in- tegrity." The audit by Inspector General Richard Kusserow covered the Health Education Assistance Loan Program. See AUDIT, Page 3 TODAY- Ooooooh, how romantic A MiOTTTNTTi TE) T in shining armnr rcn still ter's clamming armor, and threw him onto the pavement., The horse clopped on toward Nikkola's workplace at Con- vergent Technologies, she said, but Carter, who escaped in- jury, climbed into a truck and rode on a more conventional fashion to complete his proposal. Because she couldn't refuse an armored knight, she agreed to marry him. "I wouldn't have the nerve to say no after all that," she said. Hairy Droblemt president of the Portland Police Association, said he doesn't approve. "I just don't think it's professional- looking to wear a beard." Peters said. "But we were equally opposed to the military-style haricuts that Chief Still imposed. Maybe this will be a good compromise." Polish women A marican men seeking the excitement of a foreign charges $100 for the service. "I'm not going to mismatch people just so I can make a buck." The matchmaking agen- cy tells each many seeking a "sincere relationship" that it will arrange one with an Eastern European. The agency has received 50 responses in the past two weeks. Aparently, Polish women also want to meet American men. The mat- chmaking service has pictures and letters from about 1,000 Polish women between the ages of 18 and 52. The letters began arriving after Danusia Mason's mother placed an ad iI I i