Cl be Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom UiK! Vol XCVI - No. 19 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, September 30, 1986 Eight Pages Sudarkasa to Ieavi for nen By MARC CARREL Niara Sudarkasa, the University official in charge of minority enrollment, will leave her position Feb. 1 to become president of Lincoln University near Philadelphia. Sudarkasa, associate vice president for academic affairs and an anthropology professor, said she was "pleasantly surprised" at being named Lincoln's new president. SUDARKASA has been in charge of the University's effort to increase minority enrollment since1983. She has been working on a three-part report on minority enrollment and will present the final phase of that study--on retention of undergraduate minority students-this fall. The last part of the report was originally scheduled for com- pletion more than a year ago. In March1985 Sudarkasa and then-Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye vowed to double black enrollment in three Reagan 's veto of S. Africa o sanc tions sghot down WASHINGTON (AP)-The House, dealing President Reagan a major foreign policy reversal, r voted yesterday to override his veto of punitive economic sanctions against the white m.i- nority government of South Africa. The 313-83 vote rejected, in effect, Reagan's last-minute offer to invoke new but, limited sanctions by executive order against the South African government of P.W. Botha. The Democratic-controlled House originally approved the sanctions legislation 308-77, and it had seemed virtually im- possible that the chamber would reverse course and sustain Rea- gan's veto of last week. It takes a vote of two-thirds of the members present to override a veto. THE REAGAN defeat in the House shifts the battle to the Senate, where Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) has ac- knowledged that finding enough votes to sustain the president's veto has proved "very difficult." In the moments before the vote, House members debated once more the wisdom of attacking the South African system of racial apartheid with tough sanctions. Rep. Dante Fascell (D-Fla.) chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told the House it was imperative to override the Reagan veto because, "We need to express very clearly once again our feeling as the institution representing the American people the feelings we have about the institution of apartheid." 'U' Soviets Danilofi release post to five years. In the academic year following that pledge, black enrollment increased by only 0.1 percent, and Frye left last spring to become the dean of gradua:e studies at Emory University in Atlanta. "We have really tried to lay a firm foundation for advancing (minority) recruitment and retention," Sudarkasa said. "I expect that with vigorous leader- ship committments and the same hard work that has been evident until now, it will continue to rise" SUDARKASA said the Uni- versity's executive officers en- dorsed the goal to double black enrollment. Although she is leav- ing her post, she said, "I'm sure the University will move toward it." "I think Michigan has done what only a few schools have been able to do: to systematically build a program to increase minority enrollment and to pursue that goal," she said. to Sn da rkasu ... to leave U "Alumni, faculty, staff, and students are working toward those goals, so I am optimistic," Sudarkasa said. VICE PRESIDENT for Academic Affairs James Duder- stadt said a replacement for Sudarkasa will be named by the time Sudarkasa leaves. He said he doesn't want to lose the "momentum" Sudarkasa has gained in minority enrollment, and that the University will aim for a "smooth transition." "Working together we won't drop the baton. We won't leave off where she started," Duderstadt See ASSOCIATE, Page 2 FRANKFURT, We st Germany (AP)-American journalist Nicholas Daniloff flew to the West and freedom yesterday, released in a still- secretive U.S.-Soviet agreement that could help shake off a deepening chill in superpower relations. In New York, a Soviet bloc source at the United Nations said Gennadiy Zakharov, charged with being a Soviet spy, would be exchanged for Daniloff. But there was no immediate official announcement on the outline of a deal. President Reagan, visiting Kansas City, Mo., said, "We didn't give in," and said details of the arrangement would be disclosed today. Daniloff, U.S. News & World Report correspondent in Moscow for five years, told reporters after landing in Frankfurt: "I'm grateful to the president of the United States. I'm free, I'm in the West. I cannot tell you about any other arrangements. ...All I know is that I am free." The 51-year-old journalist, dressed in a cream-colored parka, appeared to be in good health but tired. "It's obvious to everyone wha: has happened," he said. "I was arrested without an arrest warrant. The case against me was fabricated." I U.S. He said he was taken into custody to give the Soviet Union leverage in its efforts to obtain the release of Zakharov, who was arrested in New York a week before Daniloff was picked up. "The KGB did not punish me. The KGB punished itself," he added. His wife held up a T-shirt See U.S.-SOVIET, Page 2 Profs not surpri sed, by reporter's release By ANDY MILLS University political scientists said they were not surprised by yesterday's release of American journalist Nicholas Daniloff, but they were reluctant to speculate about its causes unti they learn of the fate of Gennadiy Zakharov, the Soviet diplomat charged with espionage. Prof. William Zimmerman, a research scientist for the Center for Russian and East European Studies, would only say that the proposed Soviet-American summ:t was the key motivation behind See SUDIIT, Page 2 Applications increase wit 'U popularity ByJIMHERSHISER college students in the The University has-received decadep-has worked with more applications for admission versity departments to restr this year than ever before LSA's undergraduate progr Admissions Director Cliff high quait mtu et Sjogren said yesterday. Tigh quality students. A record 10,000 out-of-state THE COMMISSION co students applied for admission of six faculty members for the fall term- a rise which student, and one admims Sjogren attributed to the in- and worked since 1983 to in creasing popularity of the quality after the numb University across the country. applications to the Univ SJOGREN said the University dropped precariously in 1982 accepted about 100 more students In 1985, the number ofo this year than it did last year. state applications rose to Most of the increase in from 7,683 -the year b applications occurred in the Applications from Mic College of Engineering, Sjogren residents went from 6,982 in said, while other schools and 7,159 in '85. colleges simply reached threir For the approximately enrollment target. freshmen admitted this yea By reallocating resources to scores averaged 1,180 an increase quality, the University ACT composite averaged 27 has been able to attract more Some100 spaces ava sophisticated and serious stu- winter term will go to dents. Sjogren said the Uni- the fa students wugoaplis versity's good reputation makes it "the so-called 'hot college' these admit everyone who appli days." first time," said assistant dii The LSA Blue Ribbon of admissions Michael Dona Commission- established three HE SAID the Universit years ago to study a nationally have an especially compe predicted shortage of future See'U',Page6 next Uni- ucture am in tive to nsisted , one trator crease er of 'ersi ty 2. out-of- 9,055 efore. higan n '84 to 4,300 r, SAT d the 7. ilable "wait led for not to es the rector ahue. y will etitive Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Time out LSA Junior Rama Wiener reads "A Chinese Village" Liberty and South Division streets. yesterday while she waits for a friend near the corner of CLASSIFIED PROJECTS REVIEWED Deans support research imit By MARTIN FRANK Three associate deans said yesterday that they generally concur with a report that recommends limiting classified research at the University. Speaking at a meeting of the Research Policies Committee, the deans expressed their satisfaction with a document signed by nine of the12 members of an ad hoc committee that reviewed the University's current guidelines on classified research. The three other committee members issued a minority report which calls for the virtual elimination of restrictions on secret research. THE MAJORITY report endorses opening all research contracts to public inspection and ensuring that the results of most research projects be pulished one year after funding has ended. At the same time, however, the majority report eliminates the "end- use" clause in the current guidelines that forbyids research that could lead to the killing or maiming of human beings. Associate Engineering Dean Daniel Atkins said he is satisfied with the majority report in part because its restrictions will not radically alter permissible research. "Most of what we are doing can be accommodated by the (proposed) guidelines," he said. Atkins emphasized that his views do not necessarily represent the views of the engineering college. ATKINS said he supports classified research in some situations, especially if professors come across classified material inadvertently. "Most faculty members do not set out to do classified research, but sometimes they extend into the boundaries of classified research," he said. "There is little classified research going on in engineering, and I don't sense any pressures to do more, but should it happen, (faculty members) can move to a place that can accommodate their desires," Atkins added. But Atkins said he doubts that researchers would leave the University to go where classified research is more permissible because they would have to give up their contact with top-notch graduate students and colleagues. ASSOCIATE Medical School Dean Irwin Goldstein said he is pleased with the majority report, but he opposed eliminating the end-use clause. All three deans, however, said they are confident that faculty members will not engage in research that could destroy human life. See DEANS, Page 3 Stdetsmay not By HELENE BUUR A University space scientist has said he would discourage students from entering careers in the space science field if the government decides to replace the space shuttle Challenger by cutting funds from other space programs. If the National Aeronautics and Space Administration builds a new shuttle at the expense of other experimental space launches, it could endanger the survival of space science, said atmospheric and oceanic science Prof. Thomas Donahue. "It doesn't make sense for students to go into the area," he said. Donahue is the chairman of the space science board of the National Academy of Sciences. DONAHUE said he is "warning the nation, NASA, and Congress to worry about building something else besides building the shuttle See NASA, Page 3. TODAY- Sexual frustration n Aquarian Age," includes sessions of "Psycho- physical exercise," "Hatha Yoga," "Socializing," and "Evening Entertainment." Register at the Solar Yoga Center on East Ann Street in Ann Arbor for the $125 weekend by Friday and remember, "Sex is communication, hand with the president at the White House when she thought no one was watching. "I wanted to give a full picture of my parents together, because so many times they've been viewed from controversy," Eisenhower said in a recent interview. Mrs. Nixon was said to have been .INSIDE HYSTERIA: Opinion questions the exploitation of drug and terrorism crises by media and the government. See Page 4.