MSA election draws more voters to polls (Continued from Page 1 of name recognition (in the dorm). But MSA election official Noreen Ball two of my members are at (fraternity claimed the 1985 elections were the functions) so we're a little short han- niost successful of the past decade in ded. I'm glad its almost over." terms of voter turnout and election Paul Josephson, VOICE presidential organization. She attributed this to in- candidate said his campaign is going creased enthusiasm among' the can- well, but it all depends on "which didates, voters and election staff. people voted." Josephson said he had Ball said she anticipated topping last stationed VOICE members at the years' voter turnout of 5,000. Rob remaining polling locations. Markus, MSA's Election Director Kevin Michaels and Thomas Salvi, estimated the number around 6,000 to the executive candidates for the MUM 7,000. party also rallied at South Quad. They ALL THREE presidential candidates were joined by zealous MUM party were on hand at South Quad yesterday members who actively solicited votes appealing to hungry residents on their from each passer-by. way to dinner. Alex Diana, presidential Though Michaels felt good about the candidate for the MOVE party had race, he won't mind losing. previously pledged to "mobilize South "We've already won a significant vic- Quad" into voting the MOVE ticket into tory by bringing the matter of the office. proper role of a student government to 'Diana said MOVE had gained "a lot the student's attention," he said. g - HAPPENINGS- Highlight Tonight the Ark brings two folk favorites to town. David Mallet and Bon- nie Raitt will perform for two shows, at 8 and 10:30 at the Ark, 637 S. Main Street. Films MED- Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, 7:30 p.m.; A Streetcar Named Desire, 9:30 * p.m., Nat. Sci. Auditorium. AAFC-Gentleman's Agreement, 7 p.m.; To Kill A Mockingbird, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Romance Languages/Russian and East European Studies-Virtues of People from Bucovina; Avram Iancu; Ceramics-Millenary Art; Philip the Kind, 7:30 p.m., Aud. B, Angell. Performances Department of English Language and Literature-George Garrett, fiction reading, 4 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. Performime-Der Bersuch der Alpen Dame, play by Friedrich Deurren- matt, 7:30 p.m., Auditorium, East Quad. School of Music-Nancy Hueber, piano, 6 p.m.,; Laura Bird, cello, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, School of Music; William Ransom, piano, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall; Jazz Band, 8 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall, Rackham Building. PTP- Cloud Nine, 8p.m., Tureblood Theater, Frieze Building. Performance Network-Extremities, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington Street. Music at Mid Day-Jane Carl, clarinet, 12:15 p.m., Pendleton Room, Union. y , Speakers Center for Japanese Studies-Mike Thornton, "Konketsuji- Amer-Asian Children in Japan," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Department of English-Kathryn Gravdal, "Semiotics of Medieval Scatology: Poetic Language or Cultural Discourse," 8 p.m., West Conferen- ce Room, Rackham Building. Department of Near Eastern Studies-Salma Jayyusi, "The Image of _ Women As Depicted By Arab Women," 8 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. UM Computing Center-Bob Parnes and Forrest Hartman, "Telecon- ferencing in MTS, Part II," 3:30 p.m., room 171, Business Administration Building. Chemistry- Paul Hung, "Path Integral Methods in Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics," 4 p.m., room 1200, Chemistry Building. Museum of Zoology/Biological Sciences-Scott Lanyon, "Molecular Per- spective on Higher Level Relationships in the Tyrannoidea," 4 p.m., lecture room 1, MLB. School of Business Administration-William Rukeyser, "Business and the Press: A Strategic View," 4 p.m., Hale Auditorium, School of Business Ad- ministration Buiding. Ophthy/Psychiatry/Physiology/Bio-Engineering-John Ross, "Smooth and Sampled Motion," 12:15 p.m., room 2055, Mental Health Research In- stitute. IEEE-Linus Cordes, "GaAs MMICs (Monolythic Microwave ICs)," noon, room 1042, East Engineering Building. Latino Sttidies Program-Fernando Penalosa, "Trilingualism in the Barrio: Mayan Indians in Los Angeles," 7 p.m., Kuenzel Room, Union. Medical Chemistry- Andy Kawasaki, to be announced, 4 p.m., room 3554, -CC Little Building. Kelsey Museum-Fred Albertson, "Cesnola and Cyprus," new exhibit opening, 8 p.m., Aud. D, Angell. Center for Research of Social Organization-Dan Steimetz, "Analyzing Qualitative Interviews: A Report on a Study of Political Thinking," 12:10 p.m., room 4051, LSA Building. New World Agriculture Group/Land, Food and Justice Community of In- terfaith Council for Peace-Mark Richie, "The Farm Debt Crisis," 8 p.m., room 231, Angell. Meetings University AA-noon, room 3200, Union. Center for Eating Disorders-7 p.m., First United Methodist Church, State and Washtenaw. Psychiatry-Anxiety Disorders Support Group, 7:30 p.m., 3rd floor Con- ference Room, Children's Psych Hospital. Baptist Student Union-7 p.m., room D, Michigan League. Agape Christian Fellowship-6:30 p.m., S. Quad Minority Lounge. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m., Union. School of Business Administration-Beta Alpha Psi, 4 p.m., Michigan Room, School of Business Administration. Miscellaneous Scottish Country Dancers-Beginners 7 p.m.; intermeds 8 p.m., Forest Hills Community Center, 2351 Shadowood. League-International night, Thailand, 5 p.m., Cafeteria, Michigan League. CRLT-Paul Stemmer Jr., "Statistics on a Small Computer," workshop, 3 & 7 p.m., room 4212, School of Education. Microcomputer Education Center-"Orientation to Macintosh," workshop, 3 p.m., room 3113, School of Education. Tau Beta Pi-Tutoring, lower-level math, science, and engineering, 7 p.m., room 307, UGLI; 8 p.m., room 2332, Bursley; 7 p.m., Alice Lloyd Red s Ns Joe student fills out those foreboding financial aid forms, contemplating whether to cut back on the stereos or the trips to the Bahamas. Uedi The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 11, 1985 - Page 3 Students rush to met dedlin for fnancial aid By RACHEL GOTTLIEB Though April 15 is better remem- bered as the day when income tax returns are due, it is also the day when students can submit their financial aid applications. The University's Office of Financial Aid says that late applications will be processed, but not until all others have been handled. ONE CHANGE from the past years is that the federal governmeent will this year require all students, not just those from families with incomes exceeding $30,000 to undergo a "need analysis" to determine loan eligibility. In the past, students whose families earned less than $30,000 were automatically eligible for federal loans. In a newsletter from the University, the financial aid office said that funding for the Michigan Competitive Scholar- ship is likely to increase for the 1985-86 school year. Students may also have a better chance of getting one of the awards because the minimum ACT qualifying score is going to be lower, the newslet- ter said. The deadline for Guaranteed Student Loan applications for the fall term only is July 5. Applications for the fall/win- ter term will be accepted until October 25. k (Continued from Page ) science and engineering." AMERICA must meet the challenge of increasingly complex technology and foreign competition by emphasizing basic research, Bloch said. He added that "greater attention must be paid to coordinating the different parts'of in- dustry, which he feels will "place ad- ditional strains on the higher education system." To develop talent in higher education, Bloch advocated a more multi- ~ disciplinary approach in engineering and science education. "As the nature of science and engineering change, the social struc- ture must change. Traditional disciplinary boundaries are breaking down in science and engineering. Students should be prepared for life in a wide range of fields." Bloch said he anticipates resistance Apartheid protest continues (Continued from Page 1) spired by your defiance." Other speakers including Barbara Ransby, formerly a leader of the Columbia Coalition for Free Africa and currently a graduate student at the University .of Michigan, echoed the message. "I'm happy to see students acting in a course of conviction," she told the cheering crowd, "Involvement in this movement is education in itself. For once morality controls Columbia," she said. "What we do will encourage others to do the same action," said Cathrine, a Columbia student who wouldn't give her last name. Daily staff writer Kery Murakami contributed to this story. U. Council addresses safety issue (Continued from Page 1) Eric Schnaufer, a first year law student on the council, said the system would not be punitive in nature. Therefore, he said, students who are suspended should get a tuition refund. Schnaufer also said any suspension would not be noted on a student's tran- scipt, and any decision about suspen- sion could be appealed. The plan, which was not formally ap- proved, was an attemptto address a complaint the University ad- ministration has frequently voiced: that it is virtually powerless to stop a student suspected of committing a violent crime from returning to cam- pus. Previous drafts of the proposed code mandated that the University set up an internal system to judge whether a student violated the code. The council, composed of three students, three faculty members, and three administrators, did not go into the details of how the new plan would work. Some questions that remain unan- swered are who would decide to suspend a student,, how the appeal system would work, and whether to in- clude faculty and staff in the plan. from universities in offering a broader education. \ RESEARCH Send $2 for catalog N ~assistshe of over 16,000 topics to assyour research ef- fortsor info., call toll- free 1-800-621-5745 (in I- linois call 312-922-0300). Authors' Research, Rm 800N, . i 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, IL 80805 The University of Michigan Speech and Hearing Camp will hold an information meeting in Anderson Room A of the Michpigan Union on April 11 at 7:00 p.m. Persons interested in counselor, art supervisor, :nurse, and secretary , positions are invited to attend. Beverages will be provided. For further information contact Colin A. Macpherson at 764-4493. im GEYER TDL. - Mil M , pw 1U 15th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION GREAT STORE WIDE SAVINGS-I 20% OFFALL MICHIGAN INSIGNIA CLOTHING & GIFT ITEMS. 0 TRADITIONAL NAVY "MICHIGAN" T-SHIRT, ONLY $4.98. T GIFTSHOP 20% OFF ALL GREETING CARDSO STATIONERY@ POSTERSO STUFFEDANIMALS 0 GIFT PENS BACKPACKS & SOFT LUGGAGE. ART DEPT " SWING ARM TABLE LAMPS IN 7COLORS, $14.70. " STAEDTLER "MARSMATIC 700" 4 PEN SET, $15.75. " "STILETTO-3" DRAFTING TABLE CHAIR, $99.00. COMPUTER SUPPLIES " LEGEND 880 DOT MATRIX PRINTER, $199.00. @ 20% OFFALL VERBATIM DISKS. " 15AND 20 LB. BOXED COMPUTER PAPER, $19.99. " MS-DOS TURBO PASCAL WITH V.3.0 UPGRADE OFFER (FOR Z-100), $ 29.95. CLASSICAL RECORDS 20% OFF ALL REGULARLY PRICED ALBUMS. BOOKS 0 10%OFFALL FOREIGN LANGUAGE &TRAVEL REFERENCES. .0 THOUSANDS OF PUBLISHERS' REMAINDERS AND OLD EDITIONS TEXTS. THREE FLOORS OF MERCHANDISE INCLUDED!