I e4 Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom n n r T rr .r n . nl rt r. r . r nf'V T T % A TT v Sl'~ I VOLUME XCVII - NO. 80 ANN ARBOR. MTCHITGAN- THITRSDAY JANUARY 22, 1987 COP-YR1IHT 1987, THE ICHlLIGjAN DAILY 111'11\ .CU\17 V1\ 1Vi1"v111V111\ 1RV1\yi.. n1 9 J(u\%~j u i -, .1-e MSA fights to assert authority By MARTHA SEVETSON The resignation of Michigan Student Assembly President Kurt Muenchow from the Student Caucus on Strategic Planning Tues - day will probably have little effect on the student advisory group, officials say. "My sense is that if MSA finds out how they want to interact with us, great," said interim University President James Duderstadt. "But I also want to interact with a lot of other students -- at the grassroots level." Duderstadt invited a group of 20 student leaders to meet with him at the end of fall term to discuss his recent initiative to improve undergraduate life at the University. The students were chosen by former MSA President Paul Josephson, an LSA senior, without consulting the assembly. According to MSA Admini - strative Coordinator Richard Lay - man, this violated MSA's charge to appoint student representatives to University committees. Muenchow resigned from the caucus after the assembly passed a resolution condemning it and for - bidding MSA members to parti - cipate. The resolution said all student appointments to University committees should be made by the assembly. VICE PRESIDENT for Student Services Henry Johnson said MSA never had the exclusive right to appoint committee mem - bers. "It's a matter of practice, not of policy," he said. "I don't see a policy statement that MSA should appoint students to all committees. We have to assume that what MSA wants to be their right is a practice and an extension of a privilege by the University administration." The assembly's power to control all student appointments is asserted in MSA's constitution, but this power is limited in the regental bylaws to specific committees such as the University Council. The MSA constitution has been passed by the student body, but never by the Board of Regents. "It's a question of authority," Layman said. "The administration doesn't make a distinction between MSA and any other student group. We are the student government and are elected to represent the students, but we could just as well be the mime troupe." See MSA, Page 3 Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Pulitzer Prize winning poet Richard Wilbur reads selections of his poetry as part of the Hopwood Awards Ceremony at Rackham Auditorium yesterday. The Hopwood Awards honor undergraduates and graduate students for excellence in creative writing. Award-winning poet keynotes 1987 Hopwoods By HAMPTON DELLINGER Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Richard Wilbur highlighted the University's Hopwood Awards ceremony at Rackham Auditorium yesterday by . reading poems he composed throughout his 40-year career. Speaking before a crowd of 400, the deeply-tanned Wilbur read a Whitman's Sampler montage of the work that has made him one of America's leading poets. Wilbur's fondness for the outdoors was obvious because the area surrounding his hometown, Cummington, Mass., is the subject of several of his poems. Unlike most modern poets, Wilbur has eschewed free verse and relied on archaic, fixed forms to convey his impressions of nature and people. Although he has been criticized for an unvaried con - sistency of style and theme during his lengthy career, his technical artistry and ability to bring words and meaning harmoniously together has won him praise. The poet's reading honored 1987 Hopwood winners - freshman and sophomore students who received monetary awards for writing in the areas of Essay, Fiction, and Poetry. Endowed by the late Avery Hopwood, a 1905 University grad - uate and later a Broadway play- wright, the prizes are intended to facilitate creative writing among Michigan students. In setting up the writing awards, Hopwood hoped that "the new, the unusual, and the radical shall be especially encouraged." Audrey Joan Gebber, first place winner in the poetry category and a Residential College freshman, fol - lowed Hopwood's advice. "I don't EHopwood winners $300 Susan Greene, Residential Serene Length" $300 Rebecca-Beth Topol, RC freshman, "Connecting Broken Images" $200 Dov Cohen, LSA sophomore, "Literacy, Bubblegum, and People who savThings" $150 David Zinn, RC freshman, "New Leaves Fiction.LA $300 Farley Yang, LSA Interflex sophomore, "Uncle Finney" and "Rock Tl md'y $250 Anneliese D. Heiner, Engineering freshman, "Countdown," "Sandboxes, and" Messenger" $250 Odelia Weinberg, RC freshman, $150 Sharon Parker, U-M Flint freshman, "Closed Door" and "The Missing Link" Poetry $350 Audrey Joan Gebber, RC freshman, "Tradition and Admiration" $325 Stephanie Fody, RC sophomore, ; Gra(tlhi" $230 Emily Severance, RC freshman, "Sunday Afternoon" use meter or verse or any fixed form when I write," she said. However, she doesn't blame the ceremony's honored reader for employing more traditional forms for his poetry. By MARTIN FRANK The LSA Curriculum Committee recommended that the college adopt a concentration plan for theater concentrators. The Executive Committee will put the matter to a vote, and if approved, the new plan could take effect next fall. "We saw an opportunity to take advantage of the new resources in the English department and the School of Music," said Associate Dean for Long Range Planning Jack Meiland. Although the Theater Department has moved into has new Committee proposes changes for new theater concentrators the School of Music, students who graduate with an undergraduate degree in theater must be enrolled in LSA. The new requirements would make the con - centration less specialized, said Benedict Nightingale, who authored the revisions. For example, theater students would no longer be required to take a course in design or directing. The students would be required, however, to take a course on American theater and drama as well as two cognate drama courses: one course on Shakespeare and the other on modern drama. See PANEL, Page 2 Business profs analyze recent record-setting stock prices By ANDY MILLS Investors across the nation and around the world have been "sitting pretty" and enjoying the recent three-week surge in the stock market, but University experts, like others in the field, can't fully explain the dramatic rise. "I have no idea," said Michael Bradley, a professor of finance in the business school, when asked why the market changed so drastically. , Like other business professors, Bradley speculated that low interest rates, low inflation, and the "softening" of the dollar contributed to the bullish market. "Whether the market reflects those or is over- reflecting them is anybody's guess," he said. Until yesterday, when the market dropped 10.40 points, The Wall Street Journal reported that the 13- session rise was the longest "winning streak" for the ~"Dow Jones Industrial Average since October 1928 - one year before the infamous market crash that hurled the nation into the Great Depression. The Journal also reported that during the recent surge, the Dow has gained a total of 208.52 points and posted 12 consecutive record closes. Market analysts have attributed changes in the stock market to just about everything, including the Super Bowl and the World Series, but professors at the School of Business Administration cite more down-to-earth reasons for the record rise. Prof. E. Han Kim attributes the increase in the Dow - a survey of the New York Stock Exchange's top 30 industrial stocks - to low interest rates, a low inflation rate, and the "January effect," which Kim described as "some kind of phenomenon that people have a hard time explaining." See BULL, Page 3 Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Gone Shoppin' Melvina Lewis peers through the window of Ypsilanti's Antiques and Fine Furniture store. Lewis has been a Ypsilanti resident since she moved to Michigan from Kentucky in 1968. Anti-apartheid leader submits to Botha threat Crash victim wins victory at CRISP CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - The leader of the mixed- race House of Parliament on Wednesday apologized to President P.W. Botha for swimming at a "whites only" beach. I The apology by Labor Party 1 kztl, Alan TNnirjr,,A.rckcrti ri n.f Hendrickse would have forced him to dissolve Parliament, apparently requiring new elections for all three houses. Elections for the white chamber of Parliament are planned for sometime this year. The Parliament created in the 1984 constitution has chambers for By CARRIE LORANGER When he walked into CRISP last week, graduate student Alan Brownstein was told he needed something more than his back brace to prove that he had been injured in a train accident - or he would have to pay a late registration fee. stein, a doctoral candidate in mathematics. But when he got to the front of the CRISP line, he was told he had to go to another line for late registration. He was told there that he would have to pay the $15 late fee, Browstein said. A student is considered late after INSIDE Daily supports today's pro- choice march for the preservation of reproductive rights. OPINION, PAGE 4 Art Blakey: "I hope no one here minds if I say a few words about jazz." ARTS, PAGE 5 . ,. °