Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom VOLUME XCVII - NO. 112 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1987 COPYRIGHT 1987 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SACUA members will be elected today By WENDY SHARP Four faculty members will be elected this afternoon to next year's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs. The Senate Assembly, a 75- member group of faculty which elects SACUA members and votes on major policy decisions, will rank eight faculty and staff members chosen last month. The four highest ranked will be elected to SACUA - three will serve on the committee for three years and the fourth will serve for one year, replacing present member Lorraine Nadelman while she is on sabbatical. SACUA plays an important role in modifying policy at the University, said Dale Briggs, a third-year SACUA member and chemical engineering professor. Briggs feels the administration is open to faculty opinions and "willing to listen." The Senate Assembly, which meets less frequently than SACUA and has less day-to-day contact with the administration, is an important governance body because "it allows for more diversity of opinions," he said. TWELVE committees under the Senate Assembly work directly with University vice presidents, providing the administration with faculty input on issues such as tenure, salary, fringe benefits, and civil liberties. The nominees for SACUA are Professor of Music Edward Chuda - coff; Professor of English Robert Lenaghan; Professor of Internal Medicine William Dobbins; Grad - uate Librarian Wendy Lougee; Associate Professor of Nursing Sally Lusk; Health Science Re - search Associate Peggie Hollings - worth; Professor of Natural Resources Charles Olson; and Pro - fessor of Political Science Roy Pierce. Senate Assembly members will be nominated by their specific school or college later this month. A nominating committee from each school determines who is interested in serving on the assembly, then the faculty in each school vote on the nominees. Also this afternoon, U.S. Representative William Ford (D- Mich) will discuss changes in federal support for higher education. Ford is in his 11th term in the House of Representatives and a member of the House Committee on Education and Labor. Give degree to Mandela, group says FSAC petitions'U By EUGENE PAK Students in the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee have begun a petition drive in an attempt to persuade the Board of Regents to grant South African anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela an honorary degree. Lisa Schneider, an FSACC member, said the recent publicity about racism on campus should help push the regents toward grant - ing Mandela an honorary degree this May. FS ACC members started collecting signatures on Friday and will continue their campaign on the Diag and in the Fishbowl this week. They will present the peti - tion at the regents' meeting Thursday afternoon. Last Wednesday, a majority of the committee that reviewed a rule which prohibits granting honorary degrees in absentia recommended that the rule be bypassed when the nominee is prevented by "coercion" from attending the ceremony. Mandela has been serving a life sentence since 1962 for leading the African National Congress in the fight against apartheid. The committee's report does not men - tion Mandela's name. Despite the committee's report and the publicity about racism, FSACC member Eric Holt said members are unsure about whether the regents would honor Mandela. The petition drive was planned before the committee's recoin - mendations were released, according to Holt. REGENT Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) said he had not read the committee's report yet, and did not have a comment on the Mandela nomination. History Prof. Thomas Holt nominated Mandela in Fall 1985, but the nomination was rejected because of the bylaw. After repeated student protests, culminating in a sit-in at the April 18 regents meeting, the regents appointed an ad hoc advisory committee to review the policy. Honoring Mandela is one of 12 demands students in the United Coalition Against Racism have presented to the University to combat racism. The group also demanded that the University create a program to effectively handle racial threats and assaults. Virginia Nordby, director of the Affirmative Action Office, said signs listing numbers people can call to report incidents of racism will be posted around campus this week. "We thought we had things in place to address this, but there seems to be some uncertainty about where to go to report (racist incidents)," Nordby said. But Nordby said the postering is not a formal campaign like the "Tell Someone" program targeting sexual assaults: Bigotry pertvadesIf camp uses By The Associated Press The upsurge of intolerance and bigotry against blacks on campuses across the nation has spawned some harsh criticism by higher education officials. "I don't think there's been a great deal of leadership on the part of university presidents," said Reg - inald Wilson, head of the office of minority concerns of the American Council on Education, higher ed - ucation's chief Washington lobby. Campus administrators are be- ginning to concede that they have often been slow to react to in - cidents, or too quick to pass them off as isolated or insignificant. But many campuses feel their ra - cial climate is healthy. The Uni - versity of Utah, for example, elec - ted its first female black student president this year. While few overall statistics exist, many observers agree that bigotry is increasing on the na - tion's campuses. Some believe the problems on campus reflect what is happening outside academia. See RACISM, Page 5 Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON North Carolina center J. R. Reid goes around Michigan's Mark Hughes for two of his 27 points. The Tar Heels ended the Wolverines' season with a 109-97 win on Saturday. Carolina ousts 'M' from tour nament By RICK KAPLAN Special to the Daily CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Dean Smith was surprised with what occurred in Saturday's NCAA Tournament East Regional second- round game. Last Friday, the North Carolina basketball coach was asked about his team's poor first-half performance against Pennsylvania in the first round. "Games are hardly ever won or lost in the first half," Smith said. The Tar Heels 109-97 win over Michigan Saturday; however, was won before intermission. North Carolina led 60-43 at the half, and held off several Wolverine comeback attempts to advance to next week's regional in East Rutherford, N. J., where the Tar Heels will play Notre Dame. Playing before a home-state crowd just 150 miles from their Chapel Hill campus, the Tar Heels' talent advantage and depth overwhelmed the Wolverines (20-12 overall, 10-8 conference). To open the game, North Carolina (31-3,h14-0)mscoredsix quick points in the paint. Freshman center J.R. Reid then grabbed a defensve rebound, and fired to a streaking Kenny Smith, who pulled up and drilled a three-point shot. Michigan called timeout, trailing 9- Kennv Smith ...22 points,6 assists See REID, Page 9 Society encourages women to consider engineering careers By MICHAEL LUSTIG Only one of every five undergraduates in the College of Engineering is a female, but that doesn't bother Debi Facktor, president of the Society of Women Engineers. "I realized last November that I was the only female in one of my classes," she said. "I never thought twice about it." Other members of SWE had similar perceptions of the role of women in engineering. Jill Marchiano, a sophomore in nuclear engineering, said no one ever asks her "What are you doing here?" when she has walks into a classroom. See ENGIN., Page 2 GEO, 'U' hold contract negotiations session By ANDY MILLS The University and the Graduate Employees Organization went back to the bargaining table Thursday for a one-day meeting while waiting to contact a state-appointed mediator, but the two sides failed to reach an aar-4mmont mediated meeting by one or two weeks. The University's latest offer includes a three-year deal which would culminate in a full tuition waiver for teaching assistants after the third year. A full tuition waiver is of major INSIDE Vote for Students First candidates Ken Weine and Becca Felton in MSA elections this week. OPINION, PAGE 4 The Comedy Company's perfor - mances this weekend were a little shaky but very entertaining. ARTS, PAGE 7 Rnth th ymyPn'C an wu'man' -- I