Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom j:1; b IC 4F -I& fRtcbtgan IEaIIQ Earmuffs Cloudy with a high of 25. lol. XCV, No. 88 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, January 17, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages 'U' applications up28 percent over last year By DAVID KLAPMAN The University is raising its admission standards in response to an avalanche of applications for next year's freshman class, according to Lance Erickson, associate director of admissions. Erickson said that SAT scores of accepted high school seniors are 30-50 points higher than last year's applicants, and that grade point averages are one to two tenths of a point higher. Freshman appli- cations are up 28 percent, E.r:ickson said. The University has received 3,857 in-state and 2,902 out-of-state ap- plications as of late December. "WE'RE GOING to have to turn down many hundreds of qualified students this year," said Erickson. Only 3,970 applicants have been accepted so far, he added. Admissions officers say they are looking for a 3.3 GPA and an SAT score around 1080 for in-state applicants. Out -of-state applicants should have an SAT score of 1130 and a GPA around 3.4. David Robinson, a University admissions officer, said that there are lower standards for blacks, Hispanics, and American Indians in an attempt to bring more of these students to the University. Students in this group must have a GPA of 2.7 and an SAT score of at least 800. "These are just guidelines," said Robinson. ERICKSON cautioned that other factors are important in the admissions decision besides raw statistics. "The strength of a program, the number of courses, and the trend in academic performance" are all factors in an ad- mission decision, said Erickson. He also said that ex- tracurricular activities are not a big factor here. Accor- ding to Erickson, the admissions office lacks the resour- ces to evaluate the many different activities in which students are involved. Janet Keller, a counselor at Adrian High School in Adrian, Mich., has not seen an increase from her school in applications to the University. "I think it is probably down and I don't know why," said Keller. She said 13 people from Adrian High have applied to the University this year as opposed to 18 last year. Norman Reidel, director of college counseling at New Trier High School in Winnetka, Illinois, said he noticed nothing unusual in the number of applications to the Univ- See AVALANCHE, Page 2 Gov. t tV. 1 $150 moreI By KERY MURAKAMI Governor James Blanchard will call for a $150- 170 million increase in educational spending for 1985 in his Executive Budget Recommendations to: be released later this month, a state official said yesterday. In his budget to be presented to the state legislature on January 30, Blanchard will adopt several of the recommendations by the Gover- nor's Commission on the Future of Higher Education last month including financial aid in- creases, a "research excellence" fund, money to fight crime in schools, and funding to retrain teachers, said an official who asked not to be identified. THE PROPOSED increases mark the third year in a row where education funding has received greater attention. Last year, the state legislature increased education spending by $177 million, while the year before spending grew by $230 million, the largest increases in the state's history. Richard Kennedy vice president for Gover- nment Relations and Secretary of the Univer- sity, said the increases will be made possible by increases in state tax revenue. "Times are better," Kennedy said, "there are more cars being sold, more people with work, the increases don't surprise me. They're not out of line with the revenue projections we've seen." KENNEDY said that there will be room in the state budget for the increases only if the legislature decides not to increase most other areas of the state budget. "You can expect significant increases in educational spending," said an official in the ) seek nillion rored. Governor's office, who also asked not to be in- dentified, "although the rest of the budget is pretty tight." The official said the Governor will call for in- creases in financial aid spending - including the creation of a state work/study program to augment the federal program - increases in state competitive scholarship awards, and a lower ACT cut-off point. Blanchard will also ask for money to make financial aid information more accessible. UNIVERSITY officials aren't sure how much of the money will be earmarked for higher education coffers at this point, but any sign of a greater committment by the state to education is good news at a time when the University is im- plimenting major budget cuts. "We don't know what the actual numbers are yet," Kennedy said. "We don't know how exten- sive the effect will be." He welcomed the in- creases, though, as "a sign of progress." Much of the other increases in the Blanchard budget will aid K-12 education. He is expected to call for competitive state grants to help schools with high crime rates hire more security guards. Also included in the package are funds to retrain teachers, especially in the math and science areas.Many of these recommendation were part of the 70 page report released in December by the Governor's Commission on the Future of Higher Education. Outside of these increases and initiative programs, Kennedy said most of the funding would go to increase state aid formulas, which determine how much school districts receive ac- cording to population. Daily Photo by KATE O'LEARY Dianne Mills, one of four clerks who begin the screening of all those carefully-prepared applications, calculates grade-point averages, confirms test scores and fills in those ominous spaces marked "for office use only." State Sen. votes down welf are abortions LANSING (UPI) - To no one's sur- prise, the Senate yesterday approved 25-8 a ban on state funding for welfare abortions. The bill, which would halt abortion payments through Medicaid, now goes to the house, which is also expected to approve it. BOTHSIDES in the fight conceded the real battle will come after the House approves the measure and Gov. James Blanchard issues an almost cer- tain veto. Since 1978, former Gov. William Milliken and Blanchard have vetoed abortion funding cutoffs 13 times. Last year, the House failed by a single vote to override the veto. Most debate in the Senate focused on an amendment proposed by Sen. Harry DeMaso(R-Battle Creek) to exclude from the ban victims of rape and incest. the amendment was defeated on a 23-10 vote. RIGHT TO life of Michigan President See BLANCHARD, Page 2 Code developers criticize current-..communi'ty rules I By ERIC MATTSON Two key figures in the development of the controversial code of non- academic conduct yesterday said the current Rules of the University Com- munity are not useful in dealing with safety problems. At a meeting of the University Coun- cil, Virginia Nordby, executive to the president, and communications prof. Willliam Colburn, former chairman of the council, said a more specific code is necessary today because of the social changes that have taken place in the past 10-15 years. THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL is responsible for formulating a code of conduct for students, faculty members, and administrators, although the Board of Regents has the final say over any change in the 15-year-old Rules of the University Community. According to Nordby, the language used in the Rules of the University Community is so vague that "they cer- tainly have not been enforced." Nordby pointed to the section of the rules which prohibits "physical force" as an example of the ambiguities in the rules. Nordby said that an act as in- nocuous as grabbing somebody to get his attention could be interpreted as violating the rule. - AS A RESULT, Nordby said, the rules are rarely if ever enforced. If a student or faculty member requests ac- tion against another student or faculty member who threatened him, "you have to say to them, 'there's nothing we can do. It's very frustrating," she said. Referring to the past coucil, Colburn See CURRENT, Page 3 Donovan denied a federal trial NEW YORK (UPI) - Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan must stand trial in state court on fraud charges and cannot switch his case to federal court, a federal judge ruled yesterday. Donovan, nine other men and two corporations were indicted by a grand jury in the Bronx last fall on 137 counts of grand larcency, falsifying records and filing false documents. THE INDICTMENT against Donovan stems from an alleged scheme by the Schiavone Construction Co. of Secaucus, N.J., and a subcontractor to defraud the New York City Transit Authority of $8 million on a 1979 subway tunnel construction job. Donovan, the first Cabinet officer to be indicted while in office, was exec- tuive vice-president of Schiavone before joining the Reagan ad- ministration in 1981. He has taken a leave of absence without pay from his government job to fight the charges. Donovan, 54, had asked to have his trial separated from the other defen- dants and moved from state Supreme Court in the Bronx to-federal court. He argued that the trial would be speedier in a federal court and he could more quickly return to his Cabinet post. JUDGE LLOYD MacMahon of U.S. District Court in Manhattan rejected Donovan's argument for a transfer. "The petition for removal is denied," MacMahon said. The judge said that while there was a "strong federal interest" in a speedy trial, that was no reason to move the trial or "override the interest of the state in enforcing its criminal law." IN OTHER arguements for switching See DONOVAN, Page 3 Associated Press Holy mackerel Lansing resident Robert Henderson holds up a replica of his prize winning fish. Ned Fogle of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources presented him his prize for the 34 pound six ounce fish. Donovan . will be tried in state court TODAY Bach around the clock F YOU'RE A steadfast Bach fan, then this is your year. In celebration of Johann Sebastian Bach's Tri- Centennial birthday, the Ann Arbor Chapter of the American Guild of Organists will present a "Non-Stop Bach" marathon. The marathon will be a five-hour ex- travanganza featuring over 35 organists from the Ann Ar- The day of the donkey MULES MAY BE Stubborn but they're the "backbone of the country," according to fans who want Congress to set aside a day of appreciation for the sturdy beasts. The Lynchberg Mule Traders Association has asked Rep. Jim Cooper, a Democrat, to present a resolution to Congress declaring Oct. 26 "Mule Appreciation Day U.S.A." because of the animal's contribution to U.S. history. On the same day 20 years ago, the first male donkeys arrived on American soil, a gift to George Washington from Spanish King Charles III. The first American mules were a product can't take a mule into a barn with a shaky floor either. If the floor won't hold him he won't walk on it." Mule traders here in Lynchberg, Tenn., are planning an October bicentennial perty to commemorate the mule. "When you live in a town of 550 people you have to have something to celebrate," Brashears said. An eye for an eye A MAN WAS held Tuesday in Alpena, Mich. on a charge of assault with intent to harm by biting a chur- ch member on the face while interrupting a worhship ser- vice with mocking shouts of "Praise the Lord" and probably require skin grafts. Witnesses told officers Ferrore walked to the front of the church, tore off a piece of the pulpit, and bit Troupe on the face when Troupe and other members of the congregation approached him. Police said they found Ferrari in the back of a van in the church parking lot. Calo, they said, became abusive during the arrest. The arrest report said the two appeared to have been drinking. re it - -" I i i