WEAHE TODAY Showers; High: 58, Low: 39. TOMORROW Partly sunny; High: 56, Low: 37. 41v W1NS IE Terrell Buckley thinks he can stop Desmond Howard. See SPORTS Page 9. A century of editorial freedom Vol. Cl, No. 156 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, September 26, 1991 Copy''ht991 1 he Mrigan Day 'U' close *to filling Swain's position by Henry Goldblatt Daily Administration Reporter A University search advisory committee is approaching the final stages in selecting a new vice presi- dent for Student Services. Mary Ann Swain, who has been holding the Student Services post on an interim basis since January 1990 in addition to her position as associ- ate vice president for Academic Affairs, is leaving the position for the Academic Affairs position. Associate Dean for Research and Facilities John Jonides, the commit- tee chair, said the committee is hop- ing to make three recommendations to University President James Duderstadt for the position by the end of next week. The advisory board - composed of staff, students and faculty - has chosen two candidates that it will recommend to Duderstadt. The committee is in the process of se- lecting a third candidate to recom- mend, Jonides said. Jonides said the two chosen can- didates, whose names he would not reveal, currently work off-campus. "These candidates are senior of- ficers at other universities. It could jeopardize their own positions at their universities if it became known they are interviewing for po- sitions at other universities," Jonides said. Jonides said the committee con- sidered women and minorities in making its recommendations. "We have taken a close look at both women and minority candi- dates. Some have been-considered very highly," Jonides said. Swain is currently the only fe- male vice president at the University. Once the search committee makes its recommendations, the University will invite each of the candidates to campus for an on-cam- pus interview. Connie Cook, assistant to the University president, said the com- mittee has not crafted a process for the candidate's on-campus inter- views, but that each of the candi- dates will meet with Duderstadt. According to the University's job description for the position, the vice president for Student Services is accountable for 1,100 employees and oversees a budget of more than $80 million. 'U' slips to 22 in '91 survey of top schools JENR t DUU,, ILJany Chen Lai, a graduate student at the University of Toledo, protests against Taiwan's nationalist government in front of Lane Hall yesterday. 'U' Taiwanese students protest Chinese interference in Taiwan by Gwen Shaffer Daily Higher Education Reporter The University of Michigan has slipped in its ranking against other top U.S. colleges and universities for the third year in a row, according to a survey in the latest issue of U.S. News and World Report magazine. In this year's U.S. News Top 25 National Universities poll, the University ranked 22nd. Last year, it was ranked 21st, and it 1989, it was 17th. The magazine uses a variety of concrete and subjective criteria in determining the rankings, including faculty resources, average SAT/ACT scores, total spending per student, and incoming student retention rate. University officials said they do not feel the survey is an adequate reflection of the nation's best schools. "People would be hard pressed to find a difference between a school ranked 25th and a school ranked 50th," said Associate Director of Admissions Donald Swain. "This is not an accurate rating. It certainly isn't comprehensive." Executive Director of University Relations Walter Harrison said, "I don't think the statistics bear the reality of the situation. Student selectivity hurts us because we accept 70 percent of our students from in-state. We also didn't do well in the total spending per student category, but that money is based on a formula, not a real figure." Swain said he also believes the "financial resources" category is a factor in the University's dropping rank, especially after the 1988 decision to include financial allocations from state legislatures. University President James Duderstadt originally proposed the inclusion of the state money into the report. "Most public schools are going to be at a disadvantage because of cuts in state allocations," he said. Mel Elfin, the editor of the U. S News report, said, "While the survey may not be scientific, it certainly is systematic. Seventy-five percent of the weighting is based on objective data submitted to us by the school itself, and the other 25 See SURVEY, Page 2 y, #al Utliersit. 3~ Stanford Unliersi 4.tie) PrItneto UnI'erstl Caifornia.Institute a Technol fi6tMass. institute itTechnlY i8 Dart muth ;ailleg 22. Un~~vrsit fMcia by Chastity Wilson About 10 members of the Michigan Taiwanese Student Association gathered outside Lane Hall - the location of the Center for Chinese Studies - yesterday to protest the recent arrest of two Taiwanese professors and to sup- port Taiwanese independence from China. The two people were recently arrested for their comments in the Taiwanese Collegian, a publication known for its criticism of the hu- man and political rights abuses by the Kuomintang (KMT). The KMT is Taiwan's national- ist government, which favors im- proved relations with China. University graduate and demon- strator Yayi Cheng said, "This is not an abstract ideology. In the textbooks, Taiwanese are not sepa- rated from the Chinese. We want to establish our own cultural identity. "We want a better life for our younger generation. We want them to know that we have our own sep- arate history," she added. In the publication, the two pro- fessors said Taiwan, which the KMT refers to as the Republic of China, should be permanently sepa- rated from China and should im- plement a democratic form of government. One of the arrested people, Kuo Pei-horng, who is also known as George Kuo, is the president of the U.S. headquarters of the World United Formosans For Independence. He was "blacklisted" in 1984 when Taiwanese authorities re- fused to renew his passport. This year, he was arrested in Taiwan on See PROTEST, Page 2 Students say goodnight to Dr. Seuss by Tami Pollak Daily Staff Reporter What makes a doctor? An ah- stick? A poke? Can a doctor only stop a cough or a choke? Not this doctor, this doctor was special - the most special guy. Ie could make you giggle and wiggle right out of a cry. With Sneetches and Hortons, and four color fish The flip-flapping doctor could grant any wish. Theodor Seuss Geisel - Dr. Seuss - died Tuesday night after being ill for several months at his home in La Jolla, California. He was 87. Theodor Seuss Geisel has passed away, but in the hearts of children young and old around the world, Dr. Seuss will live forever. "Everyone will miss Dr. Seuss. Everyone. I don't know anyone who doesn't like Dr. Seuss," said Chris Hocking, assistant manager of Border's Bookstore on State Street. "The Cat in the Hat and Green Eggs and Ham were some of the earliest books we ever had in stock," Hocking said. "We sell as many to younger people as we do older people. His last book, Oh the Places You'll Go, was the graduate gift. "The books strike the right chord between self-help and a kid's story. They offer encouragement. He's much beloved," Hocking said. The good doctor wrote and il- lustrated 47 books, selling more than 100 million copies in 18 lan- guages. He received a Pulitzer Prize in 1984 for his contribution to children's literature. He put a fox in sox, he dyed green eggs and hams, let ziffs and zuffs out of the box, and journeyed to truffula tree lands. But before Seuss ever saw a grinch, let alone one who stole Christmas, before he ever heard a who, or learned of a turtle named Yertle, he was a student of litera- ture and cartoonist at Dartmouth College. After graduation, Seuss, with brains in his head, shoes over his toes, set off to great places and it was Paris he chose. But mingling with Ernest Hemingway and James Joyce soon proved a drag, and across the Atlantic he made a zig-zag. Back in the United States in 1937, Seuss published his first children's book, ...And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street. He immediately followed up his success with four more books, the last of which, Horton Hatches the Egg, published in 1940, reflected See SEUSS, Page 7 " ' Seuss Tuition caps may be enforced at 'U' if House proposal is passed by Stefanie Vines Daily Government Reporter The University may have to limit tuition increases to the rate of inflation if House Speaker Lewis Dodak (D-Birch Run Area) has his way. Dodak, Rep. Pat Gagliardi (D- Drummond Island) and Rep. Morris Hood (D-Detroit) are co-sponsoring a constitutional amendment that would give the state legislature - not the University - the right to limit tuition increases. Dodak first introduced the amendment July 31, but it was not included in the state budget. He will reintroduce it after the state budget has been resolved Monday. "A tuition cap will help the leg- islature plan the higher education budget," Dodak said in a press statement. "It will also force these institutions to be more accountable for their budgets, since they won't have unchecked tuition hikes to fall back on." Despite Dodak's claims that the racenlntn wi; lf l .11 nrn. to .nrntinn Sen. John Schwarz (R-Battle Creek) agreed with Ehlers. "It is a trendy political issue right now," he said. Elsa Cole, the General Counsel for the University, said the consti- tutionality of such a proposal has been debated before. "The issue has been litigated as to who can settle tuition at the University. Power has been given to the regents because the University is autonomous," Cole said. Cole said that if Dodak persists in passing the resolution, the University could take legal action. U' might have to payn and ne w buildngs uncle by Stefanie Vines Daily Government Reporter The University will be forced to pay more for financial aid if the higher education bill passes in the state House today. The bill, which is based on a re- "If the legislature is putting a limit on tuition, we would consider them vulnerable and subject to questioning," she said. Gagliardi said his motivation for co-sponsoring the bill is to make education more accessible to low- income students. "People in the state of Michigan should have the right to a good edu- cation that they can afford," he said. "With this amendment we are giv- ing them that right." Gagliardi scoffed at the notion of his sponsorship being a purely See TUITION, Page 2 nfrfinanCil aid )rnewhighiered bill buildings. Cost refers to all maintenance, custodial, and operational fees. The House and Senate higher edu- cation subcommittees met last week to resolve these issues before issu- ing * ,th nrwt As part of their training class, teaching assistants take a pop quiz yesterday afternoon in Angell Hall. Incoming TAs put to the test by Tami Pollak Daily Staff Reporter training and Biology lecturer Brownen Gates proved yesterday it exercise in flapping our egos in front of the classroom," he said.