The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 4, 1986 - Page 7f., The 1985-86 academic year was more than studying and exams for (he University. The Fiesta Bowl Victory, the coming of "Star Wars" to campus and the con-, *tinuing battle over the code of nonacademic conduct all occupied the minds of students and the front page of the Daily. tSeptember 5: Students crowd~ back to Ann Arbor for classes and the yearly ritual of waiting in lines. Bookstore lines, CRISP lines, bank lanes, "You spend most of your college life waiting in lines," said Diane Van Haafter, a chemical engineering senior. Foretelling a turbulent year in the Michigan Student Assembly, vice president Mickey Feusse and m~inority affairs researcher Roderick Linzie resign. Linzie would later return. The "Star Wars" controversy comes to the University. The Reagan IAdministration awards twoUnvr '../er sity faculty $225,000 to do research for the Strategic Defense Initiative. " September 19: The Board of Regents approve a controversial $50 per term computing fee. The fee will. be used to increase the number of personal computers available for students around campus. " September 20: In rapid suc- cession, the regents pass two con- troversial resolutions. First, they Agree to divest an additional $4.5 million from corporations that do business in South Africa. Added to $45 million in stocks it divested in 1983, the University has divested all but one percent of $50 million in invest- n nts it held three years ago. Im- mediately afterward, and without discussion, the .regents pass a tesolution supporting University researchers who do Strategis Defense IInitiative research. The regents say their stance supports academic freedom; students opposed to military research on campus say it y upports the controversial plan. On that same day, University Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy ]Frye resigns. Frye will leave to become Vice President for Research and graduate school dean at Emory University. Also MSA President Paul Josephson nominates LSA junior Phillip Cole to replace Feusse as vice president after considerable assem- bly in-fighting. * September 23: 48 protesters, in- eluding 23 University students and 1 professor, are arrested in Congressman Carl Pursell's offices. The demonstrators were protesting Pursell's support for U.S. aid to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. The arrests are a prelude to more arrests 10the next year. "*September 30: In a controversial move, the Rackham graduate school's student government passes a resolution opposing a speech by V ice President George Bush on campus. Bush ignores the resolution. " October 11: MSA passes a similar resolution. Bush would ignore this tool. " October 4: James Ionson, director of the strategic defense initiative, and *.proponents and opponents of the Star Wars plan participate in a forum on campus. 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" January 20: After one year ofa repairs and renovations, the bells of the Huron Tower begin chiming again. " January 21: Michigan governor James Blanchard recommends a sparse 5 percent increase in state funding for the University next year. The recommendations fall about $26 million short of the University's request making tuition increases likely for the fall. CIA recruiters cancel interviews on campus saying they do not need more personnel. They deny the can- cellations were spurred by protests. " January 23: Charges of conflict of interest are raised as it is disclosed that Lawrence Norris, chairman of MSA's minority affairs committee, holds a work/study job with Niara Sudarkasa, the University's chief minority affairs administrator. Patients and staff complete their move to the new University hospital. "February 21: Forecasting a tight budget and shrinking funding sour- ces, Shapiro says the University may consider budget reallocations. Budget reviews in 1980 meant the slashing of the schools of education, art, and natural resources. " March 7: Students protest recruiting by Lawrence Livermore Labs-which designs nuclear weapons-on campus. But most of the action takes place after the protest as campus security and Ann Arbor police follow the protesters when they begin to go home. In a strange parade, security officers follow., the protesters through two University buildings, the Diag, and finally to Shapiro's office. Shapiro would later say police actions were not justified. "-March 8: The Wolverines beat In- diana 80-52 to win the Big Ten basket- ball championship. " March 11: Members of the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity spend $1,500 to bring bill "the Fox" Foster, the world's fastest beer drinker to cam- pus. " March 13: A strange, mud- slinging campaign for MSA President begins. Candidates for the Student Rights Party and the Washington Post complain of the Meadow Party's use of "Opus" from Bloom County on posters. " March 15: Athletic director Don Canham announces that both football and basketball ticket prices will be raised this year. Football tickets will go from $14 to $16, basketball tickets to $8 from $7. " March 16: The Wolverines lost to Iowa State 72-69 and are knocked out of the NCAA basketball tournament. " March 16 - 19: 118 people,. in- cluding many students, are arrested in a week-long protest of Congressman pursell's support for Contra aid. " March 22: After eating 400 pounds of spaghetti, wallowing in a vat of slippery green gelatin, and knotting themselves in a giant game of Twister, fraternities and sororities end Greek Week. The stunts raised $3,000 for a variety of charities. " March 24: Shapiro selects engineering dean James Duderstadt to replace Frye as vice president for academic affairs. Charges of Marxism and "red baiting" are thrown back and forth at an MSA presidential debate. Meadow party candidates distributed a mem- bership list of a "Marxist" organization including Student Rights Party candidates Jennifer Faigel and Mark Weisbrot's signatures. Faigel and Weisbrot denied they were active members of the group. " March 27: Muenchow wins the MSA presidency, but the Student Rights Party wins a majority of assembly seats. " April 1: Over a hundred students turned out to celebrate the annual Hash Bash. It was the largest turnout in three years to celebrate Ann Ar- bor's $5 pot law. " March 20: Students pushing for full divestment and an honorary degree for Nelson Mandela construct a wooden shanty on the Diag. The shanty symbolizes the shacks most blacks in South Africa are forced to live in. " April 5: The shanty is attacked and torched. Shanties at other univer- sities, most notably Dartmouth College, were vandalized earlier in the year. April 7: Ann Arbor voters pass a resolution in the city elections op- posing U.S. military aid to Central America.a Democrats also solidify their majority in the city council, gaining two more seats. " April 13: Shapiro says he will not recommend that the regents change a bylaw prohibiting Mandela from receiving a degree. The shanty is torn down again. " April 17: About 100 students sleep in the Regents' Room in the Fleming Administration Building after4 refusing to leave until Mandela is given the degree. University security4 do not attempt to remove them. The University Council releases its 4 long-awaited draft on how the Univesity should deal with violent 4 crimes. Frye says the University will have4 to raise tuition by at least 8 percent unless the legislature Governor's budget dations. adds recc Tear In Review W to th~.. .ommen- Honor Mandela " April 18: The regents refuse 'to change the bylaw and grant Mandeba an honorary degree, but they order ti committee to re-evaluate the Univer- sity's policies on honorary degrees. *April 23: Students flock to the libraries in a last-minute desperate, often vain attempt to study. for' finals. Hairstyling with a Flair! Libert......State.. 668-9329 Maple..Vi.lage.... 7 61 -2733 " October 17: The Diag becomes a t.v. stage as the Today Show and Bryant Gumble come to campus. The NBC show does a segment on college life, splitting time between the University and jane Pauley at Brown University. Several students protest NBC's lack of coerage of bombings by the El Salvadoran government, but are kept away by ropes surrounding the Diag. " October 28: Shapiro forms a twelve-member committee to review the University's guidelines on classified research on campus. Student leaders have been alarmed by the review because they fear it may modify the University's ban on classified research applications of which may be harmful to human life. *Novermber 4; The Office of Affir- mative Action announces that minority enrollment rose from 11.3 percent to 12 percent-the highest ever at the University. Black enrollment, however, only budged slightly from 5.1 percent to 5.2 per- cent, far below the University's goal of 10 percent enrollment. " November 11: Dr. Jonas Salk speaks on campus to commemorate the 30th anniversary of his polio vac- cine. " November 14: Several regents say they feel the University Council is stalling and they would support a code if recommended by Shapiro. *December 4: Thomas Holt, direc- tor of the University's Center for Afro-American Studies, nominates South African activist Nelson Man- dela for an honorary degree. " December 10: Director of Affir- mative Action Virginia Nordby an- nounced the formation of a task force to examine the need for AIDS policies at the University. "The bottom line of the group is to debate and protect the rights of people who might contract AIDS," said John Hiedke, associate director of housing and a member of the task force. " January 1: The Wolverines beat the Nebraska Cornhuskers 27-23 in the Fiesta Bowl. " January 7: A University hiring committee selects University alum- nus Julie Steiner to head the new rape crisis and awareness center. *January 16: Apparently satisfied . ...r .... ..... T '--Rmp- --limp, H U trV* gua *discover hundreds of student organizations. find out what's meant by student UFEH! friday* september 12' 11:00 a.m.-4:00 P.M. a the diag vrsfty ecAdttes cweie e ars and ogranfmn 'rin le .:fiday. seplenbe' 19.1985s for further information, call 764-6498 " October 22: 15 students are arrested in the Student Activities Building, protesting on campus recruiting by the Central Intelligence Agency. * October 23: 11 more students are arrested, but recruiters manage to hold all but one of their scheduled in- terviews. Protesters allege that Ann Arbor police used unnecessary force in making the arrests. " October 27: Homecoming. Studen- ts bash in cars with sledge hammers for charity. Others wrestle in the mud. And the football team beats the Indiana Hoosiers. * rn K WCitbt FOR YOUR: Dorm Rooms Apartments We invite students xC to browse our huge selection of carpet remnants- A- t> -just the sizes and '; :. athe prices you need. South of the Border on South Main. 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