It r ur Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom IUIt Vol. XCVIII, No. 30 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Wednesday, October 21, 1987 Copyright 1987, The Michigan Daily sA 3 8 ,.Easthope to resign post t( By MARTHA SEVETSON Thomas Easthope, after 18 years as the University's associate vice president for Student Services, is re- signing today to follow a "very lu- crative business opportunity." Easthope said he will put his res- ignation letter on Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson's desk in the morning, but he will not actually leave the University until December. He is quitting his position as second in command in the Student Services office to become a partner in Diamond General Development, a local venture capital firm that in- vests in startup companies. "(Easthope) appeared to be the kind of person I can work with," said Howard Diamond, a partner in Dia- mond General Development. "I think he's an excellent judge of people, and we personally get along well." Easthope said the firm has been pursuing him for several months, but he had to resolve administrative and financial arrangements before he agreed to take the position. "This had nothing to do with anything in the University," Easthope said. "It seemed like an Y appropriate time for a change, and I it's a good opportunity for me ,f personally." J Michigan Student Assembly ,r President Ken Weine, who has d worked closely with Easthope on t assembly financing and services, said Easthope has been an important ad- ' )day East hope ... resigns from post Monaghan, Pursell protested Daily Photo by SCOTT TUH LSA senior Deborah Fishman (right) holds a sign yesterday, protesting U.S. Rep. Carl Pursell (R-Ann Arbor) and Domino's Pizza owner Tom Monaghan's reported meeting with Honduran business people. The Ralliers say the Hondurans represent a government that does not respect human rights and supports Contra rebels on its soil. MSA reaches PIRGIA By ANDREW MILLS The Michigan Student Assembly passed a modified version of a contract last night which put the PIRGIM issue to rest after months of heated debate. The assembly decided to accept a proposal from LSA Rep. Michael Phillips to amend a contract between the assembly. and the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan, an environmental lobbying group. The amendment Sstates that students running for PIRGIM's board of governors must not be affiliated with any student political party. PIRGIM board member Kristin Brink assured the assembly that if Phillips' amendment was passed, the group would definitely sign the contract. The contract, as passed last week, details how students can obtain a refund of a 75 cent fee assessed on each student at registration. The contract also specifies how the lobbying group must run the elections for its student governing board. Lobbying group members were displeased with a provision in the contract that allowed students to run for the governing board under a party affiliation. PIRGIM members say that if students were to run as party members, their campaigns would ignore PIRGIM issues and focus only on "MSA" issues such as the code of non-academic student conduct. MSA also passed a resolution that reprimanded three engineering groups for their alleged participation in a "road rally" scavenger hunt that resulted in the vandalization of a shanty on the Diag. 11 accord Labelling the act as "racist," the assembl' asked College of Engineering Dean Charles Vesl to. cease granting these groups the status of student organizations. Such an action would prevent the groups from having office space of holding meetings in campus buildings and would terminate their organizational account at Student Organization Account Services. Student groups must be "recognized" by MS-4 every year. The assembly has the power tc withdraw group status, but the Universit) administration is responsible for enforcin MSA's decisions. Responding to allegations that the student were not punished enough, Vest said he "saw nc benefit to be had by taking vindictive measure: against the individuals or the groups." See MSA, Page 5 ministrative resource for students. "He has been upfront and honest about his opinions on MS A," Weine said. "I have not agreed with him. on everything politically, but he's not going to give us the runaround." The mechanism for selecting Easthope's successor has not yet been determined, but Weine insisted that the assembly will play a deci- sive role. "It is crucial now that the Office of Student Services allow MSA a role in (Easthope 's) replacement, seeing that this position is one that MSA has contact with," Weine said. Vice President for Student Ser-: vices Henry Johnson, declined to comment on Easthope's resignation until it is official. Q LS S U's research policy still, sparks debate SAssoc. Backham Dean faces minority needs w ,r By ROSE MARY WUMMEL James Jackson, who as an undergraduate escorted Martin Luther King Jr. around Michigan State's campus, has now set his sights on improving minority enrollment in Rackham Graduate School and en- couraging minority students to complete their Ph.V s. "We are interested in increasing the representation of students and faculty of all ethnics and minori- Prof ile that lie ahead. "He's been such a dynamite leader. He motivates people to go way beyond what they thought they were capable of doing," said Gwenise Conklin, who worked with Jackson for four years at the Institute for So- cial Research building. Jackson, appointed associate dean of Rackham Graduate School last spring, has already begun to meet with faculty to discuss the effective- ness of GRE scores in predicting the success of minorities. He has also begun developing ties with Florida A&M and other historically Black universities in an attempt to ease the entry of graduate students from these schools into the University. "I have some very clear goals. My goal is to bring (the campus) that cultural pluralism that makes the University mTore than it was be- fore. If the 'U' can't bring diversity, it can't live up to its goal to edu- cate," Jackson said. See JACKSON, Page 5 - ::: By MELISSA RAMSDELL The new research policy, adopted by the University's Board of Regents last April, is still the subject of in- tense debate between students, fac- ulty, and administrators. Some fear it will stimulate an increase in military research by eas- ing the restrictions on classified re- search. "I'm sure there's the poten- tial for an increase in funded research by the Department of Defense; the less restrictive we are, the more funds we may recruit." said Research Policies Committee Chair Joe Miller. Vice President for Research Linda Wilson, who proposed the new pol- icy two years ago, disagreed. "I don't think the policy will have any im- pact on that." Advocates of the new policy think it will permit researchers greater "academic freedom" and sim- plify the review of proposals. Opponents object to the elimination of the "end-use" clause in the old guidelines, which prohibited any classified research projects that could kill or maim human beings. Under the new guidelines, the "end-use" clause is replaced with the requirement that research must sup- port the "University's mission and the public interest," as well as "enhance human life." This require- ment is now extended to all spon- sored research projects - classified and non-classified. The power to enforce these rules has passed from the Research Poli- cies Committee into the hands of deans and department heads. The committee now only advises Wil- son. "The other mechanism was very cumbersome and led to a lot of witch hunt activity - I feel this is a more open mechanism," said Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline). Martin Tobin, director of the Di- vision of Research Development and Administration (DRDA), said, "Personally, I don't feel there will be any chianges in proposal or award activity as a result of the regent's adoption of a new policy." Regent Dean Baker (R-Ann Ar- bor), who voted in favor of the new policy, said it is too early to tell what the long-term effects will be. "The issue is not military re- search - the issue is the question of openness of research," Roach said. The two can and do conflict, how- ever. The defense department often restricts researchers' rights to pub- lish their work. This goes against a See MANY, Page 5 ties," Jackson said. Last year, graduate minority en- rollment was the lowest it had been in 10 years. Black enrollment had dropped to 4.2 percent, while figures for Hispanic, Asian, and Native American remained relatively con- stant. Jackson's colleagues are confident that his tremendous dedication and commitment to others will enable him to perform the difficult tasks Daily Photo by GRACE TSAI, Newly appointed Rackham Graduate School Associate Dean James Jackson brings imaginative ideas to improve minority recruitment and retention. Market bounces back with biggest rise ever Displaced women shelter INSIDE may open next year By the Associated Press The Dow Jones industrial average bounced back 102 points yesterday, but its biggest point rise ever on its second busiest day in history erased only one-fifth of the previous day's parital recovery of the stock market, declared, "There is nothing that has happened here that should result in a recession." "Economic fundamentals in this country remain sound and our cit- By STEVE KNOPPER A new boarding house for dis- placed women will open sometime after May, 1988 if everything goes as planned, said Catherine Fischer, Women's Crisis Center coordinator. new shelter would be used "for women who are out on the street after domestic quarrels," instead of "burnt-out drug addicts" or people with psychological disorders. "Any additional bed space we can add is LSA's C-minus language re- quirement will not improve Uni- versity language instruction. OPINION, Page 4 Taj Mahal will bring his jazzy blues to the Ark tonight. ARTS, Page 7 . ,, , . 1