Ninety-eight years of editoria/ freedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 79 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, January 25, 1988 Copyright 1988; The Michigan Daily Dean tries to better 'minority relations By LISA POLLAK LSA Dean Peter Steiner - whose words and writings have been called racist by some members of the University community - Friday announced three initiatives to im- prove the college's minority rela- tions, including increased funding for LSA departments to use in hiring minority faculty. In a statement, Steiner apologized for inadvertently causing offense through his remarks, but did not re- tract the comments that students protested with a sit-in at his office Jan. 13 and 14 before publicly de- manding his removal. Friday's statement said the Uni- versity administration will "provide base budget support for all junior and senior-level minority faculty candidates identified and recruited by LSA units." Steiner refused comment, but John Cross, LSA associate dean for ' faculty affairs, said the additional funds will become a permanent part of LSA's base budget, rather than temporary allocations for individual minority candidates. The University will not add a specific sum to LSA's budget, but will allocate these funds whenever potential faculty are identified, said Mary Ann Swain, University associate vice president for academic } affairs. As part of this first initiative, Steiner said he will review the col- lege's hiring policies to insure that departments can hire minorities without being restricted by current department size limits. He also "will See 'U', Page 2 ,Shanty on the Diag found torn down By JIM PONIEWOZIK One of the shanties built by the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee (FSACC) to protest South Africa's apartheid policy was torn down again during the weekend. The shanty was torn down some- time between 6:00 p.m. Saturday evening and Sunday morning, said Campus Security Officer Derwin Brown. No suspects have been found in connection with the attack, he said. LSA senior and FSACC member David Fletcher said the organization would meet on the Diag at noon to- morrow to rebuild the shanty. "It's definitely seen as a racist act when the shanty comes down," said Fletcher. "It has a lot of anti-racist slogans on it, and when you tear it down, you're also tearing that kind of thought down.', The shanties were built in fall 1985 and spring 1986 to serve as a graphic reminder to the University community of the South African government's policy of denying civil rights to its Black population. Michigan tramples 'U, 72 -60 Guards lead Blue rout By SCOTT SHAFFER Special to the Daily BLOOMINGTON - The Wol- verines didn't just snap Indiana's 29- game home win streak. They broke its back with a con- vincing 72-60 win over the defend- ing national champions. Michigan was led by forward Glen Rice's 21 points and the back- court tandem of Gary Grant and Rumeal Robinson, who chipped in 17 apiece. Grant, who also had six assists and five steals, left the game after being shaken up with about a minute left, but was not injured. "When Bobby (Knight) has a week to prepare, he's going to know all your plays by name," said Michigan head coach Bill Frieder. "We changed all of our offense. That's hard to do in one or two days, but the plays to Glen worked ex- tremely well." SEVENTH-RANKED Mich- igan raised its record to 16-2, 5-1 in the Big Ten. The Wolverines trail only Purdue in the conference. Indi- ana (9-6, 1-4) is off to its worst Big Ten start since their 1978-79 season. After a see-saw first half that saw the lead change hands five times, Michigan took a commanding lead soon after the second half began. Robinson scored Michigan's first 11 points of the second half, and Grant ended the sophomore's streak with a tip-in that punctuated a 13-2 stretch for Michigan. "Rumeal played a heck of a ball game. I think he realizes that if we can keep him playing like that, we'll go a long way," said Rice. THE WOLVERINES con- tinued to frustrate the Hoosiers, holding them to just nine points in the opening ten minutes of the sec- ond half. "I was very impressed with th way Michigan came out to begin the second half. That may be the abso- lute most important part of the ball game," said Knight, who suffered his first loss at Assembly Hall in nearly two seasons. "It snowballed on us from there to the point where we were just about out of the game." A Grant jump shot increased Michigan's lead to 57-37, its largest advantage of the game. Despite a mild comeback, Indiana could get no closer than' 11 points during the re- mainder of the game. A Grant three- pointer cut short any thoughts of a Hoosier victory. Frieder used primarily a zone de- fense in an attempt to confuse See BLUE, Page 10 Doily Photo by SCOTT IITUCHY Michigan's Gary Grant (right) guards Indiana's Keith Smart in the first half of yesterday's Wolverine trium- ph. Grant shut down Smart, allowing last year's NCAA tournament hero just six points. LaGROC sits in at Fleming Building By JIM PONIEWOZIK About 35 members of the Les- bian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee held a sit-in on the sec- ond floor of the Fleming Adminis- tration Building Friday. They spoke with administrators, demanding that sexual orientation be included in the University Board of Regents' anti- discrimination bylaw. LaGROC members met with University Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs Robert Holmes and Vice President for Student Ser- vices Henry Johnson during the sit- in, which lasted from 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The regents' refusal to amend the bylaw "was very, very sad," said University graduate Adrian Johnson. "I've lost a tremendous amount of respect for this university... the hostility and violence against (gays) is being ignored." The University Board of Regents earlier this month voted down a pro- posal to change the bylaw, which presently prohibits discrimination based on "race, sex, color, religion, creed, national origin or ancestry, age, marital status, handicap, or Vietnam era status." In a press release issued Friday, LaGROC also demanded: -the inclusion of sexual orienta- tion in the University Affirmative Action logo; -an apology from Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) "for equating a serious struggle for civil rights with sex in restrooms." This demand re- ferred to Baker's request at the last Pro-life and pro-choice forces listen to anti-abortion speakers Friday in the Diag. The demonstration marked the 15th anniversary of the Supreme Court's landmark Roe v. Wade decision. Pro -Choicers By VICKI BAUER On the 15th anniversary of the Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion in the United States, more than 200 Right to Life and Pro- Choice demonstrators rallied Friday on the Diag. As scheduled Right to Life speakers criticized abortion, urging protection of the unborn, 150 pro-choice demonstrators chanted, "Not the protest anti-abortion children enjoy precious life," Yuille said. women's reproductive righ About 75 Right to Life ralliers, made up of abortions. more Ann Arbor residents and families than Uni- "The attack of Med versity students, demonstrated more calmly, racist attack. Most of the holding signs that read "Abortion is murder" and ing are Black women. It' "I survived the prenatal stage." One four-year-old ual freedom," demonstratc had a sign taped to his jacket reading "God hates Throughout the rally abortions (He loves you)." Pro-Choice and Right tol Andrea Della Villa, a Right to Life speaker, tional and uncompromisil told the crowd the trauma of having an abortion rally hts and Medicaid-funded icaid funding is also a women who need fund- s also an attack on sex- or Paul Carmouche said. , the views from both Life groups were emo- ng. See story on Medicaid-funded abortions, Page 3. I