The Michigan Daily-Monday, October 19, 1987- Page 3 Number of students *enrolked increases By DAVID WEBSTER The total number of students enrolled in the University increased again this year. There are now 49,523 students enrolled in the University, including its Dearborn and Flint campuses, according to a report compiled by the Associated Press. That figure is up 331 students from last year. One University official said there are about 35,500 graduate and undergraduate students on the Ann Arbor campus. The University's total enrol- lment has continued to increase over the last few years despite a nation- wide decline in the number of graduating high school students. One reason for this is that applications to the University have not decreased over the same period. "We have not really seen a downturn in the number applicat- ions," said Robert Holmes, assistant vice president for academic affairs. The University has the highest enrollment of the 13 public colleges and universities in the state, the report said. Michigan State has the second highest enrollment with more than 42,000 students. hiag shanty torn down By STEPHEN GREGORY One of two Diag shanties built by the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee was torn down over the weekend, University Public Safety officials said. Public Safety Officer John Warming said the shanty was razed sometime Saturday night and that his office currently had no suspects in the incident. Pam Madison, an FSACC member and LSA junior, said the destruction of the shanty is a n indication of "a lot of racist violence on campus." She said it also indicates that people are still unaware of the shanty's significance. "I think it's important for people to educate themselves about what's going on - in South Africa. (The shanty) reminds us of the conditions people all over the world live under." Among the shanty's boards and steel support beams were a broken radio, a banner which said "Casino," and posters from Sigma Nu and Theta Chi fraternities. Sigma Nu President Jim Doyle, an LSA senior, said, "I am confident that no one in our house was involved and that no on is trying to implicate us (in the incident)." Doyle said Sigma Nu members plastered posters all over the Diag during fraternity rush three weeks ago and that some one may have ripped them down and thrown them in the shanty. Eric Holt, a United Coalition Against Racism member and engineering senior who helped build 'the shanty last spring, said there was a two-foot by two-foot hole on one side of the shanty and said, "It's possible someone could have just shoved (the posters) in there." Members of Theta Chi fraternity could not be reached for comment. Madison called on the University administration and the Michigan Student Assembly to publically condemn the incident. MSA President Ken Weine said the assembly has condemned "violent acts of racism" on camptis in the past, but he said he couldn't predict MSA's response to this incident. She also said she FSACC was going to try to rebuild the shanty: sometime today. The first shanty, which went up: in March 1986, and the second, built; last winter, have been the targets of several attacks. Last spring, students' collected boards from the shanties in; a scavenger hunt allegedly sponsored by three engineering societies. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Daily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN Talking to plants Basil Osborn, a gardener from Montreal who is visiting Ann Arbor, examines a dwarfed tree called a Bonsai at the Bonsai Expedition at the Botanical Gardens this weekend. U' ranks 8th in college poii By JAMES BRAY The University graced the ranking of the nation's top 10 colleges and universities at number eight, tied with the University of Chicago, according to a poll of college presidents nationwide. Stanford University of California took :the pole position at number one followed in order by Harvard, Yale, Princeton, University of California at Berkeley, Dartmouth, Duke, the University and University Chicago tied for eighth place, and Brown. The University and the University of California at Berkeley were the only public universities to be ranked in the top 10. Keith Molin, Assistant to the Vice President and Director of Capital Projects, said, "The rating is a tremendous compliment to the University." Molin attributes the ranking to "tremendous achievements in the last few years." Among those achievements, Molin mentioned new facilities, additions to the faculty, and the quality of the student body. The survey is produced biennially by the news- magazine U.S. News and World Report; 1,329 college presidents were surveyed this year with a 60 percent response rate. Each president was asked to list the 10 schools which offer the best undergraduate education. The colleges were divided into nine catagories according to their classification by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. In 1983, the Universty ranked seventh in the survey, citing the small school atmosphere provided by the Residential College. The University fell from the ranks of the top 10 in the 1985 survey, mentioned only as noteworthy. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was the only school to fall from its top 10. ranking in 1985, ousted by the University's return. LSA junior Jennifer Loeb said,"It's pretty accurate to be ranked in the top 10. As far as public universities, this is probably the finest." From the way people study here I can see it. But from my own personal life I don't understand it," said LSA junior Jamie Verrico. First lady expects recovery WASHINGTON (AP)- Doctors told President and Nancy Reagan yesterday that the finaltests from her breast cancer surgery show there has been no spread of her cancer and that the "prognosis for full recovery is excellent," a White House spokesperson said. "Mrs. Reagan is recovering remarkably well from surgery,"~ Reagan's physician John Hutton said in a statement. Hutton said Mrs. Reagan's 12-physician team is "completely satisfied with her progress in every respect." The president traveled b y helicopter to Bethesda Naval Medical Center early yesterday morning to await the final test results from Saturday's surgery. The first couple received the news about the final tests at midmorning, then spent time looking at the flowers that had been sent to the first lady and the get-well cards that have been pouring in, White House spokes person Marlin Fitzwater said. ON Students Dedicated to Knowing and Communicating Jesus Christ! SCornerstone Pastor Mike Caulk Diag Evangelist Tuesdays 7 p.m. 2231 Angell Hall 971-9150 CHRISTIAN L loll FELLOWSHIP \ ) In, can happer need to be nee Glenmary Home Miss brought the two together That's why we're seeking time, labor, and friendship It's an easy argument that1 spend the Yuletide. But in, of brotherhood, commun as old as the hills. Decemt December For more information, retL to: Brother Jack Henn, C Box 465618, Cincinnati, C Name Address City Phone#( ) GLENM a world of possib n. People need pe ded. Nobody be ioners. Because in the heart of Al single Catholic rr pin Appalachia ti there are more c Appalachia, you' ity, and true Chr ber 19-24, 1 28-January :urn this coupona GLENMARY HO )H 45246-5618. w v J4 t4 4 Dilities, great things ,ople. And people... lieves that like the for 15 years we've ppalachia. nales to share their his holiday season. omfortable ways to i'll discovera sense ristmas spirit that's 987 2,1988 as soon as possible ME MISSIONERS, Age Zip 016-87 ioners Grievaw By EVE BECKER The head of faculty's governing body is unsure what action will be taken in response to a student's charge that a University professor sexually assaulted her. Harris McClamroch, chair of the faculty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs said his committee, as the faculty's gov- erning body, could not comment on the case against University professor Thomas Rosenboom unless the case was brought to the group in an official appeal. procedurt Although the student's report has gone through channels in the University, she said she is unsure if her complaint has been accurately filed because of the complexity ofi grievance procedures.; Complaints of sexual harrassment or of discrimination can be filed through the Office of Affirmative Action, the ombudsman, or the student's dean or department head. The procedures for each school and1 college differ slightly, but each fol- low the same base model procedure.1 McClamroch said that SACUA complex will not get involved with this specific case, because it is a policy making body. Also, the group does not want to comment.now because the case may come in front of SACUA if it goes through the University grievance process. According to Washtenaw County court records, the woman, an LSA senior, was entering her house on Sept. 12 when a white male attacked her. About 10 days later, the woman identified her alleged assailant when he entered her place of work. The woman said she has threaten- ed a civil suit, but has not yet filed. Do Something For Yourself. C' 1 91 t ' y +ti 111 State- College ARY home miss I --.ddpr 1170 Broadway 663-4896 THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today a ;. r~Y~V~6N 6\ /0 Campus Cinema Menage (Bertrand Blier, 1986). 7:30 and 9:15 p.m. Michigan Theatre. Soft Is the Heart of the Child. 4:30 p.m. MLB 3. Speakers David Noel Freedman - "Ashera Yahweh and his Asherh." 4 p.m., 3050 Frieze. Eunice Thurman - Washtenaw Association for Retarded Citizens. 7:30 p.m., Sheraton University Inn, 3200 Boardwalk. Evolution and Human Behavior Program - Observational methods in human ethnology. 1521b Rackham, noon. Melissa Bowerman - "Overproductivity and the 'No negative evidence' problem: How do children cut' back on rules with lexical exceptions." 3050 Frieze, noon. Joel Miller - "Organic and Meetings Land, human rights, and U.S. militarization in Honduras - Kuenzel room, 8 p.m. Christian Science Organization - 3rd floor League, 7:15 p.m. Asian-American Association - Trotter House, 7 p.m. Circle K - Room C, League. 7 p.m. Furthermore Career Planning and Placement - ."Polishing your resume to perfection. 4:15 p.m., CPP. Career Planning and Placement - Strategic Planning Associates employer presentation. 4 p.m., Kuenzel room. HBO Special - AIDS video festival, C. Everett Koop answers phone in questions. Public Health I lunchroom, noon. Safewalk - 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m., Rm 102 UGLi, 936-1000. .4 p O, 4 r Attention Faculty and Ph.D. Candidates Vnutnm A na rnm ArAnmarl., 11107~ (I ' AT U Send announcements of un- I I