Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom Air an 43 all New Jersey Partly sunny and mild with a high of 55. Vol. XCV, No. 145 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, April 3,1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages S tate may expand, scholarship . program By RACHEL GOTTLIEB Special to the Daily LANSING - A House panel yester- day passed a bill that would extend eligibility for Michigan Competitive Scholarships to graduate and part-time students. Currently, only full-time un- dergraduate students qualify. The bill, passed by the committee on colleges and universities, is one of five measures designed by House Democrats to increase the availability of financial aid. UNDERGRADUATE students ap- plying for the scholarships would probably face more competition if the legislation is enacted, according to Ron Jursa, director of student financial assistance for the state Department of Education. And if the bill is passed, new tests would have to be implemented so that students who failed to qualify for the scholarships as undergraduates could still be eligible as graduate students. The House measure would also allow students to remain eligible for 10 years instead of four. Before the House Subcommittee on Higher -Education .Appropriations is a second bill which would increase the amount of money available for the competitive scholarships by $8 million, form $16 million to $24 million. SUCH A boost would provide 3,000 to 4,000 more scholarships, and lift the maximum award from $940 to $1,200, according to Burton Leland, chairman of the House colleges and universities committee. Additionally, the funding increase could allow state legislators to drop the qualifying American College Test score from 88 to 85 points, Jursa said. "There's no magical number (for how much the ACT score may drop)," said Leland. "When there's more money in the pot, more folks will qualify." The House committee yesterday also discussed the four other bills included in the Democrats financial aid package. The bills would: establish a- inaiciat aid hot line; earmark funds for an in-state work study program; and provide Michigan Educational Op- portunity grants for the most needy students. Gorbachev agrees to summit Site, date to be set. Daily Photo by BRAD MILLS No place like home Michigan's Ken Hayward slides in beneath the attempted tag by Bowling Green's catcher Dave Oliverio as batsman C.J. Beshke looks on. Oliverio dropped the pitch allowing Hayward to steal home for the first run in the second game of their doubleheader sweep. See story, page 7. MSA asks for halt of LSA dea "w By SEAN JACKSON The Michigan Student Assembly last night passed a resolution asking the University regents to table their decision on the reappointment of LSA Dean Peter Steiner until he states his stance on student representation on the college's executive committee. MSA President Scott Page said Steiner's refusal to discuss the issue with LSA Student Government leaders was the impetus for the resolution, which was unamiously passed except for one abstention. THE RESOLUTION asks that Steiner's new term be placed on hold until he "publicly state-his. views on student representation on the LSA Executive Committee to the regents, the LSA faculty, and the LSA students. Page cited the importance of the n reappointment committee, "We feel we should have He added that the resolution will not students on there because it is the most keep him from presenting Steiner to powerful committee in the University's reappointment at the regent's May largest college." meeting. LSA senior Rajeev Samantrai, a Frye says he continues to oppose any member of the LSA Blue Ribbon Com- attempt to place a student on the com- mission, advised on the writing of the mittee because "the nature of the resolution. He said the executive com- . business of that committee should be mittee. has not offically discussed the done by the highest faculty members." issue since the Spring of 1982 and the Steiner had no comment on the goal of the resolution is to keep the topic resolution. an issue. EXECUTIVE committee member "IF WE can keep the issue alive year Prof. Demming Brown said that while after year, we may at some point make in some respects a student appointment progress," Samantrai said before the might be good, it would be impossible to meeting. "We expect this resolution to place students on the committee. remind the dean-that the issue won't go Brown said the committee considers away." "delicate matters that students should The issue has been talked to death not be dealing with," such as faculty according to Billy Frye, vice president tenure decisions. He says course of academic affairs and provost. See MSA, Page 3 WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has "agreed in principle" to a summit meeting with President Reagan, but the time and place still must be worked out, a senior U.S. official said yesterday. Two possible sites and times are Helsinki, Finland, in August, and the United Nations in New York in Septem- ber, the official, who insisted on anonymity, told The Associated Press. IT WOULD be the first U.S.-Soviet summit since 1979, when former President Jimmy Carter and the late Leonid Brezhnev signed the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT ID) to reduce some kinds of nuclear weapons. The two sides are stockpiling other missiles, however, and have been unable to agree on ways to stop their arms race. In declaring it was "high time" for a summit, Reagan said at his last news conference two weeks ago that he would try to quicken the pace of negotiations now being held in Geneva, Switzerland, if he met with Gorbachev. But Reagan and the U.S. official said the agenda would range beyond weapons to include other issues, as well. Amongthem, presumably, are human rights, which the Soviets pledged to improve when they and 34 other countries, including the United States, signed the Helsinki agreement in the Finnish capital in 1975. REAGAN HAS frequently criticized the Soviets' record. The Helsinki agreement will be marked by a 10-year anniversary observance on Aug. 1. It is an important accord for the Soviets sin- ce it climaxed more than a decade of ef- fort to confirm their influence in Eastern Europe. Finland, as the host, has been con- sidering invitations to the foreign ministers of the 35 governments that signed the agreement. The opening of the annual session of the U.N. General Assembly, mean- while, draws foreign ministers and other senior officials to New York. Last September, Reagan chose the session as a forum for a major speech urging a new dialogue with Moscow. THE PRESIDENT'S spokesman, Larry Speakes, told reporters "there have been no discussions about arrangements for a summit, no meeting set, no time set, nothing along those lines." Reagan proposed a 'summit to Gor- bachev in a letter sent with Vice President George Bush to Moscow last month for the funeral of Konstantin Chernenko, the last Soviet president. A REPLY was received last week. "Basically, it's positive," the senior U.S. official said. "We'd like a summit," he added, but he stressed that further diplomatic ex- changes would be needed to lay the groundwork for a Reagan-Gorbachev meeting. Reagan is the first U.S. president sin- ce Herbert Hoover not to have met with a Soviet leader. He had expressed a willingness many times to have a summit meeting, but Brezhnev, Yuri Andropov and Chernenko all were in poor health. But Gorbachev, at 53, appears to be a vigorous leader. He made a positive impression during a visit to London for talks with British Prime Miister Maigaret Thatcher last winter and has indicated he is ready to challenge the Reagan administration on policy and in world propaganda forums. Pledges say 'Deke' rumor. is not true,, By KERY MURAKAMI A rumor circulating around campus that some of the pledges of Delta Ep- silon Kappa broke their promise to join the fraternity after walking in on two members engaged in homosexual relations is not true, the pledges say. "The incident definitely didn't hap- pen," said pledge president Erik Laumann, an LSA freshman. "Sixteen people pledged and sixteen people are still pledging." CALLS TO THE 15 other pledges brought the same answer. "It's just a stupid prank," said pledge Jeff Kline, an engineering freshman. The pledges and house members are uncertain where the rumor began, though they say it may have been star ted by another fraternity or by a comedian during a Laugh Track per- formance. Other fraternities, however denied responsibility for the rumor and officials for Laugh Track could not be reached for comment. Other pledges, who refused to be identified, said they were concerned the rumor would hurt the fraternity's reputation. "A frat's rep is all that it has," said one pledge. 'U' IMAGE DAMAGED? u Racism article stirs anger By KERY MURAKAMI Administrators at the University yesterday called an article appearing in last Sunday's Detroit Free Press "misleading" and damaging to the University's attempt to increase minority enrollment. The article, which was circulated to other newspapers by United Press International, char- ged that black students find the campus per- meated by racism. It says that black students gave examples of "racist taunts, stereotyped at- titudes toward black culture, an incident in Oc- tober in which a watermelon was smeared on a black artist's mural in the Markley Hall dor- mitory, and library and bathroom scrawls with racist phrases." 4 THE ARTICLE also cited MSA minority researcher Roderick Linzie as saying that the University's inability to attract minority studen- ts or faculty gave the campus an image problem. "It's an article like this that helps to create an image problem," said associate vice-president for academic affairs Niara Sudarkasa. "I wasn't aware.that we had one, but if we didn't, now we do," she added. University vice-president for academic affairs and provost Billy Frye said that 'this article, despite its good intentions, may precisely hinder what they and we would like the University's minority situation to be." "IT'S UNFORTUNATE that charges made willy-nilly against us have to undo the efforts that we're making," said Frye. "Here on the tails of our new initiative to draw minority students to this University, one of the largest papers in one of our main recruiting grounds, turns around and hurts us." Dave Robinson, assistant director of ad- missions, however didn't think the article would hurt his efforts to draw blacks to campus, even though he says he already encounters an image problem when recruiting students. "I really don't think there are hordes of stud- dents that are scared of us," said Robinson, "these students are used to taking it on the hide, enduring hardships. We lose a lot of students' because they can't afford it, and we're im- plementing a lot of measures that are going to 'U' officials By NORA THORP The recent recommendation made by Niara Sudarkasa, associate vice president for academic affairs, to put more emphasis on high school grade point averages than test scores when considering black students for admittance has been a source of concern for some ad- ministrators. Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs and provost, said the proposal would not mean the quality of incoming black students would 'drop, but more students who may not have been admitted because of low standardized test scores - but who have high GPAs - could be admitted, he said. FRYE STRESSED that the University does not intend to repeat the mistakes of its effort in improve that." THE ARTICLE also charged that "fueling the students' fire are what they see as unresponsive and secretive attitudes among University ad- ministrators." "It's an enormous misrepresentation," said Frye. "We're as frustrated as anybody (about the University's low black enrollment)." "I know that the small number of students has to make a difference in the way students feel," said Sudarkasa, "my efforts are to get an en- vironment that will be satisfying to them." See ARTICLE, Page 2 question bla the 1970s to broaden the pool of eligible black students.simply by dropping admissions stan- dard across the board. That effort resulted in a dropout rate commensurate with the number of students admitted with lower GPAs and test scores. According to Dave Robinson, assistant director of admissions, some students were ad- mitted with GPAs as low as 2.3. Since then, admissions standards have stif- fened somewhat. Today, black students are ad- mitted without a waitlist as long as they have at least a 2.7 GPA, 17 ACT score, or a score of 800 on the SAT. "If we do this, because of that 1970s we'll be more cautious," said Frye. "We don't want to admit students to have them flunk out." UNDER THE experimental admissions Detroit Free'Press article stirs anger among 'U' officials. ck admission. program proposed by Sudarkasa, students who have GPAs of 3.2 or above and low test scores ' would be given special consideration for admit- tance. Robinson said test scores should not be thrown out the window, but that often standardized tests are biased to the white middle class student and that this can be reflected in the scores of an otherwise bright student. He said admissions counselors would have to pay closer attention to the quality of the high schools from which black students graduate when placing greater weight on GPAs, because test scores ''have some predictive value." Retired psychology Prof. John Milholland, who has researched the importance of GPAs and See 'U', Page 3 TODAY- Question MSA candidates DOYOU have a beef with student government leaders at the University? If you do, here's your chance to make candidates for the highest position on the Michigan Student Assembly listen sas has voted 9-1 to overrule planning commission staffers who wanted the hamburger shop painted a nice plain beige. -The commission staff in this Kansas City suburb said the proposed fast food restaurant should be beige so it would be compatible with its surroundings in a development. The commission itself split 3-3 on the proposal March 11, but Monday's council vote settled the matter once and for all. The hamburger chain, which serves distinctive 212-inch- square hamburgers, says all of its 192 stands are white with Frederick Parsons claimed 320 pounds ($384) on his home insurance policy, arguing that the fish were personal effec- ts like a lawn mower or garden chair. Bur Judge Richard Toyn accepted the insurers' contention that the goldfish were livestock that would not be covered by home insuran- ce. Parson, 59, a lawyer, has decided not to appeal. "It has already cost me about 500 pounds, 600 dollars, more than the fish were worth," he said. Only six fish are left in Par- son's pond, but he said he takes some consolation from his Building or in a boat parked in a driveway, according to a telephone survey conducted for the New York Post. A 29- year-old man from Brooklyn said he made love in a telephone booth, the Post reported this week. A 22-year-old Nassau County-man said he had sex on the Long Island Rail Road. A 30-year-old Manhattan man reported having sex in a giant cereal ,box that was being used as a stage prop. Some other places where New Yorkers claimed to have made love included a baseball diamond, a golf course, a I i i , I iI