1£ bziuula Ninety- nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. IC, No. 46 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, November 10, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Battle against Prop. A rages on Pursell prevails over Pollack, 54-45%, in race BY VICTORIA BAUER Though Proposal A passed, ban- ning state-funded abortiom .n , ; women in Michigan, the battle is not over. Fifty-eight percent of Michigan residents cast their votes for the pro- posal, Tuesday, while 42 percent voted against it on, said a 'spokesperson from the State Elec- tion Commission in Lansing. "We are very pleased with the victory and the spread of the vote. It's good that the people of the state Baker, Varner remain regents BY MARK KOLAR Incumbent University regents Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) and Nellie Varner (D-Detroit) emerged from Tuesday's election triumphant, beating out challengers Republican Cliff Taylor and Democrat Thomas Lewand. Baker, embarking on his third eight-year term on the Board of Re- gents, was very positive about his reelection. "I'm very grateful to those people on campus who were supportive of me, of which there were many," he said. "I think the people of Michigan know my record and the things I represent, and they reelected me be- cause they're satisfied with my rep- resentations of their interests." BAKER has come inder fire fronr many student groups over the past few years for his stances on South African divestment and gay male and lesbian issues. Varner was unavailable for com- ment. Baker led all candidates with 1,304,877 votes in the statewide contest. Varner came in a strong second with 1,250,439 votes. Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) had mixed feelings about the out- come. "I would have preferred my party to win, but we have two expe- rienced regents returning," he said. VOTERS reelected the current regents, but Brown said he did not feel this necessarily indicated confi- dence in the current Board of Re- gents. "Regental elections are a re- flection of how state offices go, and you can't read anything into them," he said. ' Republican president-elect George Bush carried Michigan by a wide margin, but voters chose Democrats for some state seats. The Democrats kept control of the Michigan House of Representa- tives, although the Republicans gained three seats, and Democrat Donald Riegle was reelected to the U.S. Senate. Libertarian regental candidate James Hudler, of Sylvan Township, attributed the outcome of the race to the lack of attention voters pay to the Board of Regents elections. "I DON'T think people study the regental races very closely. If they had, I think the results would See Regents, Page 3 INSIDE Readers respond to the "myth of the Black rapist." See Opinion, Page 4 Art exhibit scales the Berlin Wall. See Arts, Page 7 r finally had a chance to speak," said Barbara Listing, president of Right iv Lif in Michigan and chair of the Committee to End Tax Funded Abortions. THE PROPOSAL will take effect in mid-December, once the State's Board of Canvassers has cer- tified the votes, Listing said. Margie Long, spokesperson for People's Campaign for Choice which battled for months against Proposal A, says that although the See Prop. A, Page 2 BY MICHAEL LUSTIG After tense hours of uncertainty, U.S. Rep. Carl Pursell (R-Ply- mouth) emerged as the winner over State Sen. Lana Pollack, retaining his seat in Congress for a seventh term. Pursell received 119,897 votes, 55 percent of the total, to Pollack's 97,829 votes, 45 percent. Pollack, a Democrat from Ann Arbor, left her reception at the Howard Johnson's on Carpenter Rd. at about 1:30 a.m. yesterday morn- ing, after learning that two voting machines in Northville and two in Livonia had malfunctioned and weren't going to be repaired until later in the morning. At the time, she was leading Pursell by several thousand votes. P U R S E L L who was resting yesterday, trying to recover from a cold he caught last weekend, released a statement from his Ann Arbor of- fice: "I am extremely pleased with our strong finish to this campaign," the statement says. "My re-election has benefitted from the support and dedi- cation of many volunteers and con- tributions from across the Second District. Our finish in the'55 percent range shows the strong voter support for returning a representative to Congress who cares about fiscal re- sponsibility and works hard on behalf of the District. "Considering the amount of money spent by my challenger, I am See Pursell, Page 2 Pursely ...ekes out victory Bush begins transition After the A polling place in in hour-long lines lines to cast their storm KAREN HANDELMAN/Daily the Michigan Union stands, vacant yesterday after throngs of voters waited to vote in Tuesday's election. Voters throughout campus waited in long ballots for the presidencial, senate and congressional races. LSA to consider draft 'diversity' requirement BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President-elect George Bush yes- terday staged a splashy, flag-waving return to Washington and said he hoped to nourish a "new era rich with possibility and full of of hope." He went with Vice President-elect Dan Quayle to the White House to accept President Reagan's congratulations and promise of a smooth transition. Bush made his first Cabinet ap- pointment with unusual swiftness, naming longtime confidant James Baker III his secretary of state. At his first presidential question- and-answer session with reporters, Bush noted Quayle will enjoy the same "access to the papers, access to the intelligence, and access to the in- formation" that he said he has had in the No. 2 slot. Democrat Michael Dukakis took his final bow on the 1988 campaign stage at a news conference yesterday in Boston. He congratulated Bush on his victory, but said it was based in large measure on campaign "distor- tions." "I gave it my best shot," said the Massachusetts governor. Bush is headed for likely conflict with a strengthened Democratic maj- ority in Congress, but Republicans say he can ease his entry into office' if he gives assertive and moderate dir- ection on the budget deficit, housing and the environment. Democrats go into the 101st Congress with slightly greater maj-; orities in both Houses. Bush said he would do his best to work with the new Democratic Congress. With a close Florida race still The president-elect has nominated his campaign manager and former Sec- retary of the Treasury Jim Baker for Secretary of State. BY LISA POLLAK The LSA curriculum committee formed a subcommittee Tuesday to write and propose an LSA "multi- cultural studies and diversity" course requirement. But it neither approved nor rejected a proposal for a required class on racism. Last month, a group of students and faculty proposed that LSA create University Course 299, an inter- disciplinary study of racism, and require it of all LSA students. The committee hasn't abandoned that proposal; the subcommittee will continue to review it, said Jack Meiland, LSA assistant dean for curriculum and long-range planning. BUT OTHER committee members have said the committee will not agree to require UC 299. Some consider the class's focus too narrow; others want to see the course tested before it is required. Instead, "most people on the committee support some sort of di- versity requirement," said committee member Ashish Prasad, an LSA se- nior. The four-person subcommittee, headed by Prasad, hopes to draft such a requirement by Dec. 6. Unlike the mandatory class pro- posal, this one would allow students to choose from a variety of courses, Prasad said, such as Third World lit- erature, gender studies, and compara- tive civilizations. It could also in- clude UC 299, which the committee has approved as an elective. "Racism should be understood cross-culturally. By focusing only on the problem of- racism in the United States, UC 299 is, in a sense, parochial. People want a broader requirement," he said. PROPONENTS of a UC 299 requirement continue to oppose such a "diversity" requirement. "The main point is that we're interested in see- ing the University live up to its commitment to promote understand- ing of racism. A diversity require- on at least 55 seats in the new Sen- ate, a gain of at least one. They strengthened their command of the House by acquiring at least 259 seats - a gain of two from the 100th Congress, with three races still to be decided. With 99 percent of the vote counted yesterday, U.S. Sen. Donald Riegle had 61 percent of Michigan's vote, to Jim Dunn's 39, a slightly closer race than the polls had pre- dicted. Nearly complete totals of the presidential election showed Bush re- ceiving 54 percent of the popular vote to 46 for Dukakis. Bush won 40 states and 426 electoral votes; his rival won 10 states and the District of Columbia, for 112 electoral votes. "I'm not sure what the mandate is," said Sen. Rudy Boschwitz (R- Minn.), chair of the National Rep- ublican Senatorial Committee. By retaining a Republican White House and Democratic Congress, he added, voters are saying "they're relatively satisfied with the conditions they find." Bush and Quayle take office on Jan 20. See Class, Page 3 being tallied, Democrats could count I Out-of-state enrollment at 'U' down from '87-'88 BY NATHAN SMITH Enrollment for first-year out-of-state students de- clined nearly 1.5 percent from last year's totals, Uni- versity officials said, a drop which they attribute to the University's four-year plan to lower the percentage of out-of-state students. Non-resident students comprised about 35.5 percent of 4,600 first-year students this year, according to Robert Holmes, assistant vice president for academic affairs. He said that last year about 37 percent of 4,463 first-year students were from outside Michigan. The drop in non-resident students will cut the Uni- versity's total revenues by more than a half-million dollars, according to Holmes, because non-residents pay about three times more tuition than in-state students. serving the Michigan community of students," said State Sen. Joseph Conroy, (D-Flint), a leading propo- nent of the legislation. THE BILL passed the Senate but failed in the House, Conroy said. A small committee of legislators and University officials adopted in January a plan that will lower non-resident enrollment to about 30 percent of the student body by 1991. The University agreed to at least a one percent de- crease in out-of-state students every year for four years, Conroy said. The decrease is a "first-step," said Conroy, who added that the University has been complying with the agreement. £