Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom VOLUME XCVII - NO. 95 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12,1987 COPYRIGHT 1987 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ...".~ '.0 6M inorit { w' , x K?, r inititiv 1,)ib k .., $1mllo tmare y oe ................. .-* Afim tveA to ... ....~.. .. . . ,T.. .M ......,...e Fire Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON AnArFire fihe aePwr hcstetp fbidnso h ot ieo .Uiest etra eas mk a eotdi n' restaurant around 1 p.m. Black Perspectes University students create minority newsletter By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN University-wide pressure has prompted the creation of an Affirmative Action initiative that will target at least $1 million toward solving its continuing mi- nority problems. Vice president and Provost James Duderstadt will announce the program next month. The interim president hopes to involve the entire University community in combating a problem many see as top on the University's agenda. And although nothing is official yet, it appears to be working. The Michigan Student Assembly and the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs have joined to put additional pressure on the Uni- versity to move even more quickly. By forming a working relationship, MSA and the faculty senate hope to generate ideas that will soon be implemented through the program. "THE INITIATIVE is com- ing from all over, everyone is converging on this urgent prob- lem," said William Stebbins, chair- person of SACUA. "All that MSA and SACUA want to do is see that it gets absolutely top priority - March is a great target to aim for." Improving both Affirmative Action and the recruitment and retention of minority students has been a major goal of University President Harold Shapiro's for many months, said Robin Jacoby, assistant to Provost Duderstadt. Despite President Shapiro's ab- sence for the past two months, Jacoby said all of Duderstadt's init- iatives are the result of months of preliminary planning along with the president. The initiative will mainly concentrate upon improving tradi- tional Affirmative Action efforts to increase the employment of under- represented minorities, but its resources will also target proposals to help fight racism and increase the retention of minority students at the University. A recent outbreak of open racism is speculated to be a major motivating force behind the urgency of the initiative's measures. "It's disgusting that we have a little Georgia right here in Ann Arbor," said MSA president Kurt Muenchow. JACOBY AGREES. "The recent incidents of racism on campus have only made it clearer that this is an issue that needs to be See MSA, Page 3 By EUGENE PAK After a year's hiatus, a small group of University students are again publishing the campus magazine Black Perspectives. The four-page magazine features stories, information and poems written by and about blacks, focusing on black student issues. They have written about financial aid, Martin Luther. King Jr.'s birthday, and career opportunities and internships for minority students. Yvonne Perry, Black Perspectives' co-editor in chief, said she felt that students -- including herself - are often unaware of minority student events. " I missed a lot of opportunities last year," Perry said. "Minority Student Services has a newsletter, but it often came out after the events had happened... and The Daily does not always do very much about minority affairs on campus." Other Black Perspectives staffers share this sentiment. "We need something other than the tradi - tional newspaper stories so we can air our views," said stafferr Alyson Hinton. LAST MARCH, after learning about Black Perspectives from Minority Student Ser - vices Associate Barbara Robinson, Perry decided to bring the magazine back into circulation. Perry was editor in chief of her high school S newspaper. t Black Perspectives first appeared on campus in the late 1970s and, according to Robinson, "was at its prime" in 1981 when it was a four- page newsprint tabloid with outstanding pho - 'tography. But a lack of interested students resulted in its temporary lapse in February 1985. "Students come in cycles," Robinson said. "'You have x' number that are interested, then those students graduate and no one picks it up for awhile."i See MAGAZINE, Page 5 Socialist author to speak on economy r Three battle for Fifth By TIM HUET Western industrial economies intrinsically tend towards stag- Ination; this stagnation must be counteracted by such artificial stimulants as large deficit spending,, socialist author and journalist Harry Magdoff will argue in a speech tonight at Lorch Hall Auditorium. Magdoff will speak at 7:30 p.m. on "Debt, Stagnation, and the Economic Crisis." The growth of private and go- vernment debt is an irreversible trend under the present economic system, Magdoff writes in his latest book. tagnation and the Financial Explosion. Nurses vote to strike, if needed By EVE BECKER The University of Michigan Professional Nurse Council (UMPNC) voted last night to allow their negotiating team to call a strike if it becomes necessary. UMPNC represents more than 1,400 registered nurses at the University Hospital and other Uni- versity health care facilities. The nurses' contract expired Sep- tember 30, and they have been Magdoff co-edits the Monthly Review , one of the oldest and re- spected socialist magazines. He be- gan his political and journalistic career in 1931 with the publication of a prophetic article warning against the rise of the Nazis in Germany. His continued work in radical journalism led to his ex- pulsion from City College in New York. He went on to a successful career in government, becoming an aide to Henry Wallace, secretary of com- merce in the 1940s. His go- vernment career came to a halt with the rise of McCarthy and the House Committee on Un-American Activ- Magd off ... socialist writer ities. Magdoff, exercising his Fifth Amendment right, refused to testify before the investigatory commit- tees. See ECONOMY, Page 2 Ward By CARRIE LORAN( and JERRY MARK( The winner of next Mon Fifth Ward Republican primar face a formidable task in the Arbor City Council election April: defeating Kathy Edgren. Edgren, the popular Demo incumbent, won her 1985 ra 1,237 votes- a huge margi CITY' PRIMARIES0 city elections. And she pla. campaign harder than ever April. "I'm still going to work even though I don't feel threatened by any of the Reput candidates," Edgren said. Edgren will face one of Republicans: Bob Ferrn, a f( city employee, Jeff Gallatin, a realtor, or Phil Spear, also a rf Spear, who has been endors Republican leaders, ran foi Repulican GER council last year and lost to current DN councilmember Doris Preston (D- day's Fifth Ward). He concedes that hey ry will "has no political experience," but e Ann feels that "if you try something and is this lose, that doesn't mean you're not allowed to try again." cratic LIKE LAST YEAR, Spear's .ce by priorities are fighting crime, in for providing more housing, and free- ing city departments from council control. He called for more "citizen 4 7ivolvement" in preventing crime, but acknowledged that the Ann Arbor Police Department has already successfully implemented a .ns to neighborhood crime watch program. r this Spear said he fears crime may increase in the Fifth Ward due to a ... wane hard, low-cost housing project approved lreal by city council last week. The counci' blican project, designed to ease the city's city hour affordable housing crunch, may inappropi three trigger a "floodgate" of low-income hire depai :ormer residents from Detroit and other the job." local nearby cities, Spear said. Gallat:i eealtor. Spear acknowledged that Ann because1 sed by Arbor faces a housing crunch, but going on r city said he does not support the See RE] spot G;allatin nts consistent inspections songoing review of the zsing code. "I think it's iate," he said. "We should artment heads who can do tin, who said he is running he is "tired of what is in the city," charged that :PUBLICANS, Page 2 LSA fills two vacant associate dean spots By MARTIN FRANK LSA Dean Peter Steiner filled the two vacant associate deanships this past week. The new appointees face the challenge of maintaining the quality of the college, and rebuilding areas that need help. Steiner pointed to reworking the undergraduate curriculum and re- Cross, the new associate dean for faculty appointments, is replacing Jack Walker effective July 1. Cross is an economics professor and a Research Associate for the Mental Health Research Institute. At the close of his term, Walker is leaving to assume the position of chairperson of the politicalI science INSIDE Jae Kim's case proves that a code of non-academic conduct is unnecessary. OPIMON, PAGE 4 Platoon, A Room with a View, and Hannah and Her Sisters are neck and neck and neck in the Oscar race. ARTS, PAGE 7 Winger Joe Lockw ood's hard k