4 Page 8 -The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April 20, 1988 .CLSSIIEDAD MSA Continued from Page 1 ROOMMATES ROOMMATES NON-SMOKING FEMALE needed to share 2-bdrm. a t. in N. Campus area for next fall & winter. 9267 + util. Call 763-0868. 'NON-SMOKING FEMALE wants own room for fall term only. Call Debbie995-1341. NONSMOKING Female wanted to share room mn apt. with 3 great g iris! Close to cam- pus. Call 764-3660 or 9955-8495 NOW! SINGLE-F'88 ONLY--incl. H20 heat + prkg. Only $275/mo. Call Rob 747-6$91. SPACIOUS PRIVATE ROOM in great house on Arch St. for Snring-Summer. No )ease, fun housemates, $1 5 a month, parking included.Call 747-6738. WOMAN TO SHARE DOUBLE in house 1018 E. University, $240/mo. Diana 764- 8783. NEEDED: two roommates in 4 person apt. 924 Oakland. $1000/mo. heat & water mc. Smokers (any kind) WELCOME. Call Pam or Tina 764-7737 or -1760 NOW! FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: share 1g. rm. in house. Sept.-Sept., cheap. Call 747- 6538 persistently! FEMALEROOMMATE for May-May lease to share 3 bdrm. apt. A/C, micro dishw. modem with sundeck on bldg. $380/mo. Call Laura, 930-0609 or Nancy, 994-5775. GOING AWAY FALL TERM? Let's share a lease. Call Julie at 764-0965. MALE ROOMATE FOR FL/WN--fumished, a/c, fire p lace, 3-bedim. bilevel, 2 blks. from MLB. Cal Anish 764-2831. MALE ROOMMATE needed to share large one bdrm. apt. May-Aug. $100/mo. 747-6794 after 10 pm. MOVING TO CHICAGO? Need room- mate.Call Randy at 769-8837. NEEDED: HOUSEMATESin gle room for a non-smoking female.Sept.- Sept. lease.Call Sarah 764-7898. 1' s i i i fired." Engineering Rep. Scott Denmark, a first-year student, said MSA could not decide for the student body whether Steiner should resign. But Bruce Belcher, parliamentar- ian member and Rackham student, disagreed. "I'm not sure that's the important point," he said. "Steiner's acts were racist. Is fighting racism more important than having student support?" Social Work Rep. William Holmes said, "To request a resigna- tion of Dean Steiner would send out a strong message to would b e racists," he said. In January, LSA released the minutes of the September meeting of its departmental chairs in which Steiner described his plan to promote affirmative action in faculty hiring. "Our plan is not to change this Uni- versity into another kind of institu- tion where minorities would natu- rally flock in much greater num- bers," he said. Steiner has said that the com- ments were taken out of context. And several professors have defended his character. Groups Continued from Page 1 Tibbs responded that, as president, Williams does have the authority to speak for BSU and was backed unanimously by the executive committee of the group. LaVeist agreed with the allegations of Williams and Wallace. "That's pretty much the reason why I left," he said. "They (UCAR) got away from their original intent." "It's no longer a movement against racism. It's a movement against racism, classism, sexism, militarism, and heterosexism." - Daily staffers Kery Murakami and Jim Poniewozik contributed to this story. Files show new evidence in RFK shooting SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - More than 2,400 photographs from the assassination of Robert Kennedy were unaccountably destroyed nearly 20 years ago, officials said yesterday as they opened to the public for the first time the long-secret police files. There was no explanation in the 50,000 pages of documents why the pictures were burned. ME Up I senio 1 9 8 8 A series of events honoring graduates of the University of Michigan Class of 1988 Senior Happy Hour The University Club* Wednesday, April 20 4:00pm - 8:00pm Free Admission Swing Out Party Michigan Union Ballroom Friday, April 22 9:00pm - 1:00am Featuring: The Difference $2.00 cover 0 The University President's Reception for the class of '88, alumni, friends and family The Alumni Center Friday, April29 4:00pm - 6:00pm Jazz on the Terrace for the class of '88, alumni, -friends and family The University Club Terrace. Friday, April 29 9:30pm - 1:00am Featuring: Third Stage Jazz Band Cash Bar Free Admission For more information call Campus Information Center at 763-INFO The UnrerSt Club s a ere club for students. faxuth, staff alurnnand thenr accompoanied guests Only mnembers may purtchase alcohol 'Class Continued from Page 1 said that recently the emphasis has recently focused more on just racism. This, he said, is more in line with the demand for a mandatory class on racism made by the United Coalition Against Racism a year ago. The class will also deal with sexism. BUT ORGANIZERS don't expect the class to end racial ten- sions: "It won't convert racists into non-racists," Kimmeldorf said, but "maybe we'll create a climate of more tolerance here on campus." The University is not the only one in the country to consider a class on racism. Stanford changed its first- year Western Civilizations require- ment to include literature of women and minorities, calling the class "Culture, Ideas, Values." U.S. Secretary of Education William Bennett, quoted in the New York Times yesterday, condemned the change, saying a vocal minority group forced Stanford into starting the class. Peter Sporn, a lecturer in internal medicine, said the faculty group has been working in conjunction with UCAR in planning the class. Refer- ring to Bennett, Sporn said the secretary's accusations were "ludicrous." THE PLANNING group is designing the class only for LSA, but other units are creating their own plans to address the problem of racism. College of Engineering Dean Charles Vest said that the college is not planning a specific course on racism, but is considering other ways to look at racism in the con- text of engineering. In engineering, a project funded by the college, students talk with engineering student groups about minorities and women in engineer- ing, Vest said. In the end, the stu- dents will produce a videotape. Executive officers have been dis- cussing a variety of approaches to combatting racism on campus, said Robin Jacoby, interim assistant to the president of the University. A class is just one of those approaches. Administrators have withheld com- ment not because they are trying to delay starting the course but because they want clarification of plans, she said. 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