Ninety- nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. I C, No. 137 Ann Arbor, Michigan --Wednesday, April 19, 1989 Copyright 1989, The Michigan Daily Assembly p iallocates over a BY TARA GRUZEN After spending an excess of $7,108 from its available funds for the 1989 winter term, the Michigan Student Assembly voted last night to allocate more funds to student or- ganizations on the contingency that it could take money from its spring/summer budget. However, MSA Treasurer Jonathan Wilson, a business admin- istration graduate student, said after last night's meeting that the* $45,000 that is set aside for the spring and summer terms must be reserved for outstanding financial commitments from this term and for running MSA during the next four months. MSA Vice President Rose Karad- sheh, an LSA junior, said that whether or not money is available from the Spring/Summer budget, the assembly should not spend beyond its funds for the current term. "When we go before the (University's Board of) Regents, we want to appear fiscally responsible," Karadsheh added. She stressed that if the assembly allocates money from its spring/summer budget, the re- gents will see the assembly as irre- sponsible with its money. However, Bruce Frank, an MSA law representative, said the assembly has an excess of about $15,000 for the spring and summer and that the money should be spent. udget Frank said that because MSA al- located $10,000 for a conference next November, the assembly will be able to use that money until it actu- ally begins funding the conference in November. Thus, he said MSA is able to allocate the $15,000, which he said is available in the spring/summer budget. 'When we go before the (University's Board of) Regents, we want to ap- pear fiscally responsi- ble.' -- Michigan Student Assembly Vice Presi- dent Rose Karadsheh Wilson said in an interview after last night's meeting that all the money for the spring and summer was tied up and that there is not any extra money to spend. However, Wilson had to leave the meeting early and could not make this point publicly to assembly members. Thus, there was much heated de- bate about whether the assembly could spend some of that money. Unsure about whether they had money left to give to student groups, the assembly voted to allo- cate money to Prospect Magazine, a Jewish journal on campus, on the condition that there was extra money in the spring/summer budget. Wacky Diag Dancers JESSICA GREENE/iaily Miko Mautsumura, an LSA junior, and other members of the Stevens co-op boogie at noon in the Diag. Mautsumura said, "It's not for money, it's not for a political cause, it's not for credit, and it's not drug induced." MSA chair wants to file formal complain BY ALEX GORDON The Michigan Student Assem- bly's Minority Affairs Commissionr should file a formal complaint todaya with the Michigan Civil Rights Board against the campus group Michigamua, commission chair1 Delro Harrs said yesterday. MAC has charged that against Michiguamua, an all-male honor society, has violated a 1973 MCRC ruling during the group's initiation rituals last week. The ruling ordered Michiguama to "eliminate all public rites on campus" because the group had practiced "unlawful discrimina- tion" against Native Americans. In addition, Provost and Vice Michigamua President for Academic Affairs contacted (MAC),s Charles Vest said last night that seriously." Michiguama "is under active inves- The commissio tigation by the administration." He four accounts fro refused to elaborate. Michigamua's ini But Harris, an LSA junior, was nesses' statem skeptical of the administration's "confirmation that commitment. "It sounds like rhetoric S to me," Harris said. "No one has so I can't take it In has collected m witnesses of tiation. The wit- nents are a what happened, ee MSA, Page 2 Other universities implement race class requirement BY LISA WINER Like the University's LSA faculty, other college faculties across the country have had to make difficult decisions about whether to require education on racism and ethnicity for students to graduate. Some colleges have responded to racist incidents on their campuses by .instituting changes in the curricula, including required education on racism and ethnicity. Others are still considering whether to do so. At the University of Michigan, LSA faculty members voted two weeks ago to reject the revised "Railton Proposal" for a graduation requirement on race, ethnicity, and racism. The proposal, which was voted down 140-120, originated with a demand for a mandatory class on racism made by the United Coalition Against Racism and other local groups. The University of Wisconsin and the University of Minnesota require or will re- quire that undergraduates study races and cultures that are not in the majority in order to graduate. Minnesota was the first major university to adopt such a requirement, having done so two years ago. This coming fall, Wisconsin's first-year students will make up the first class to fulfill such a re- quirement. Both requirements are similar in content. "We are not limiting the courses to racism. Racism will be only half the course material," said Wisconsin Prof. Bill Vandeburg of the History Department. "We'll focus on the Black response -- their triumphs to adversity." Minnesota Prof. John Wright, chair of the Afro-American Studies Department, said courses there will have "both a posi- tive and negative set of concerns." At each university, the faculty has sole responsible for any curriculum change. Deans of the faculties at Wisconsin and Minnesota spoke publicly in support of the proposals. Michigan LSA Dean Peter Steiner chose not to speak on the proposal. Steiner has refused comment to the Daily. At Michigan, some have asserted that the administration's decision not to take a stand on the class may have affected the faculty's vote. Michigan English Prof. Buzz Alexander, who worked to pass the proposal here, said, "For us a key difference was the deans of faculty (at Wisconsin and Minnesota) sup- ported the proposals and in each case spoke very dramatically for it. We (the faculty) were working more in isolation." Faculty who voted against the proposal might have been persuaded to vote for it had the dean spoken in its favor, Alexander said. "The dean is a very powerful figure. He can be very persuasive. People who respect the dean are going to say it's okay and go for it. That's a huge difference," he said. With few exceptions, administrators at Stanford and Brown universities supported the curriculum changes. See Class, Page 3 Faculty members reunite for the first time since red scare BY DONNA IADIPAOLO Three former faculty members - suspended by the University in 1954 for refusing to testify before the Clardy Subcommittee of the House Un-American Ac- tivities Committee - will be brought together tonight for the first time in 35 years during a program titled, "The McCarthy Era at The University of Michigan." The Clardy Subcommittee investigated University faculty members and students for alleged "subversive activities" during the era when former Sen. Joseph McCarthy destroyed the careers of U.S. officials by accusing them of ties to the Communist Party. After the three refused to testify in Lansing, they were suspended and hearings were held at the Univer- sity. Two of the three were dismissed from the University and the third left some time later. Former University Prof. Mark Nickerson is now professor emeritus of pharmacology at McGill University. Former Prof. Clement Markert currently serves as Distinguished University Research Professor of Animal Science and Genetics at North Carolina State University. H. Chandler Davis, a former Univer- sity instructor, is now a professor of Mathematics at the University of Toronto. The three former faculty members will speak today during the program, which begins at 7 p.m. in MLB Auditorium 3. See Faculty, Page 2 Wright determined to fight charges WASHINGTON (AP) - House Speaker Jim Wright, opening his defense against a string of ethics committee charges, sought yesterday to rally Democratic colleagues and told them,"I intend to fight and I in- tend to win." He~ said that while he may have But more troubling to many of his colleagues were charges that Wright sought to evade House limits on outside earned income through seven E bulk sales of his book,"Reflections of a Public Man," most of them made in lieu of accepting speaking fees from interest ROBIN LOZNAK/Daily Production worker Lucius Doyle wields an exacto knife as he prepares last Friday's edition of the Daily. For 21 years, Lou has been an inspiration to Daily staffers who have worked with him at the newspaper. al manstay to call i is afer 121 vears of holding things together I