Page 2-The Michigan Daily- Thursday, January 16,1992 Duke on ballot Present at both opening Absent at either opening and closing roll calls 6 r closing roll calls despite protest by state GOP LANSING, Mich. (AP) - The Michigan Republican Party can't keep former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke off the GOP presiden- tial primary ballot, Attorney Gen- eral Frank Kelley said in an opinion yesterday. Kelley's opinion carries the weight of law unless overturned in court. He said Duke had met the legal requirements to make the ballot and Secretary of State Richard Austin couldn't keep him off, despite the party wishes. . As required by state law, Austin issued on Dec. 13 a list of those "generally advocated" by the national media as candidates. Austin, who is Black, included Duke on that list. Duke then filed an affidavit with Austin's office say- ing he was a candidate and wanted to be on the ballot. Kelley said by meeting those two requirements, Duke legally was entitled to a spot on the ballot. "That is the statutory test, not whether a political party wants an individual on its presidential pri- mary ballot or whether a political party believes an individual shares its beliefs and convictions," Kelley He listened to grim accounts of lost jobs in the computer industry, of a crash in real estate values, of a state economy down 50,000 jobs since 1989 and likely to lose 10,000 to 15,000 more in 1992. "The economy as we see it today is still in a free fall," said Dan. Ayers, the town manager of Merrimack. Bush acknowledged it's so: "I've known the economy is in free fall. I hope I've known it. Maybe I haven't conveyed it as well as I should." He said he will propose real an- swers for long-term growth. He in- sisted the administration has sought wrote. Officials for the state GOP refused to comment on Kelley's opinion at this time. A spokesperson for Duke's cam- paign didn't immediately return a telephone call seeking comment. President Bush and former presi- dential adviser and columnist Patrick Buchanan also are on the GOP ballot for Michigan's March 17 primary. In a related opinion, Kelley also told Austin that he and local elec- tions officials would have to fol- low the Michigan Democratic Party's rule on same-day declaration of party preference for the primary. State law requires voters to de- clare their preference at least 30 days before the primary. However, the state party decided to change its rules and allow voters to do that on Election Day if they choose. Those who have already de- clared as Republicans wouldn't be able to switch on Election Day, under the Democratic rule. Kelley said since the Democratic rule applies to all individuals, it prevails and Austin and local elections officials must follow it. sound programs for three years, only to be "stiffed by the Democratic Congress." Bush said, his message to Congress will be "I've just come back from New Hampshire, and a lot of people are out of work, and if you really care, pass this package." Bush also confessed that he'd made mistakes on the economic situ- ation, especially in his assessment earlier this year that the recession was over. He said 49 out of 50 economists thought so, too. "This state is going to pull out of this," he said. "This national economy is going to pull out of this. ... It always has, and it will." Architecture Jason Richardson Engineering 'Brent House Brian Kight Christopher Teeley Aaron Williams Law Michael Warren Library Science Christopher Thiry LSA Ken Barnette Tom Cunningham David Englander Scott Gast Corey Hill Joel Martinez John McClosky Sejal Mistry Todd Ochoa Melissa Saari Steve Stark Rob Van Houweling Medicine Michael Lee Natural Resources Nena Shaw Nursingg Nicole Shupe Rackham Roger Da Roo Leilani Nishime ;.,Amy Polk Maria Yen Social Work :Jennifer Collins Art Chery/ Hanba Business Michael Oduro (excusedl Tony Vernon " Dentistry Rob Rocco Education Rob Resio Kinesiology Charles Smith LSa Heather Johnston Jeff Muir Felicia Tripp Music Sarah Knutsan Pharmacy Ian Nordam Rackham Jeff Hinte Alan Wu Italics denote representatives who missed both roll calls. Let it snow This plant sits on a warm window sill in the Law Quad while the flora and fauna unfortunate enough to be out of doors are covered with snow. HORNBACK Continued from page 1 city President James Duderstadt. The University was a "serious place" 28 years ago, Hornback said. "Faculty were serious about teach- ing. We were known to be a serious place of learning." Since then, Hornback said the University has become progres- sively less concerned about students. Too many students are closed out of classes, money is given to admin- istrators instead of hiring more fac- ulty and faculty are generally no longer concerned with teaching, he said. "Teachers don't assign papers be- cause they don't want to read them... faculty teach less, and classes get bigger and bigger," he said. Hornback said he began thinking about leaving the University 12 years ago and made the decision three years ago that he "had to get out of here." " i want to be in a place that's se- rious about students ... and students are serious about learning," Horn- back said. Bellarmine College is a small liberal arts college with only two administrators which enables it to focus on educating the students, Hornback said. Hornback wrote that he has be- come frustrated fighting "against all that is wrong" with the Univer- sity. It is "an uphill battle," he ex- plained. One University administrator said that Hornback may be overre- acting. "I agree that the University doesn't care enough about under- graduate education, but ... I think there is more concern than (Hornback) realizes," said Honors Program Director Ruth Scodel. "The problem that frustrates him is real, but I think he exaggerates it," she said. Scodel described Hornback as a professor who often voices his heartfelt concerns. "Bert will drive some people crazy ... but even those people will respect him," she said. Moon Chung, a junior in the in- teflex program, said that Hornback made his classes exciting and cared about his students. "We met at his house once outside of class," she said. Hornback is "intellectual, in- sightful and caring," Chung said. "I've invested a lot of my life here," Hornback said. "But as a teaching institution ... I simply think there's something fraudulent about (the University)." BUSH Continued from page 1 I'm here to listen. "I'm not up here to assign blame," he said. "I'll take my share of the blame. I don't take it for not caring or not understanding." Bush faces conservative commen- tator Patrick Buchanan in the Feb. 18 GOP primary. Five candidates for the Democratic presidential nomi- nation are campaigning, too. Buchanan stopped in at an unem- ployment office in Manchester and said the president should come see "the economic casualties of Bushanomics." One of Bush's Democratic rivals, Paul Tsongas, said the president owed New Hampshire "some idea what his economic strategy is." The president is expected to campaign here twice more before the election; Vice President Dan Quayle and other administration figures are due, too. At a hangar at Pease Air Force Base, shut down a year ago in the first of the post-Cold War base closings, Bush met with 115 leaders of business, industry and economic development organizations. "I know I've got big problems, but we're going to take care of them," he said. *1 'ALM ar hinrg fir -i ning - So are we at FRATERNITY Continued from page 1 and achieve their goals. We can ben- efit each other." The fraternity has also been in contact with members of the Black Greek Association, Sun said. He said that joining 1FC and in- volving itself in other campus orga- nizations may be a possibility in the future, but for now the group is fo- cusing on increasing its membership and firmly establishing itself at the University. There will be an information session tonight at 7:30 .in the Michigan Union's Pond Room for anyone interested in learning more about the group. Formal rush will begin Jan. 26 in Stockwell's Blue Lounge. We are a community that shares our longings, our questions, and even some answers. . Campus Chapel Sunday warship: 10 am&6pm 1236 Washtenaw Ct. -- 668-7421 (one block south of CCRB at Geddes & Washtenaw) Beco e a Damily Photographer' LS&A SCHOLARSHIP LS&A Scholarship applications for Spring-Summer 1992 and Fall-Winter 1992-93 are now available In 1402 Mason Hail To qualify for scholarship consideration, a student must be an LS&A undergraduate and have completed one full term in LS&A. Sophomores must have a U of M grade point of 3.7 or better and Juniors and Seniors must have a GPA of at least 3.6. The awards are based on financial need and on academic merit. ATTENTION ADVERTISERS! igiit Plfr4igari ttg'o business office is closed for Martin Luther King Day on Monday, Jan. 20. There will be no newspaper published that day. Advertising deadlines for Thursday, Jan. 23rd's issue are moved to Friday, Jan. 17.. Ads running on January 23 may include: " regular Daily paper ads " Weekend Etc. ads " Dining and Drinking Guide ads MANDATE Continued from page 1 rector of University relations, cited social functions, especially those held by the Black Greek Association (BGA), as examples in which proper resources were lacking. He pointed to a recent BGA party in the Michigan Union's Ballroom at which many students were turned away due to a lack of space. BGA fraternities and sororities do not own houses, and hold their social events in public venues. BGA President James Green agreed that capacity is a regular problem for his organization. "We do have a capacity problem. The only room big enough for us is the Ballroom, and we regularly turn away 200 or 300 a night there," he said. Aside from resources, University officials stressed the importance of institutionalizing the gains made by the Mandate. John Matlock, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, pointed out that 15 years ago, Black enrollment had risen to the current 'level, after which it began to drop. He said steps must be taken to make sure this does not happen again. "People will have to look at us 15 years from now and ask if we continued the trend," he said. Tracye Matthews, who, partici- pated in the protests that helped spur the Mandate and is now on the board of the Baker-Mandela Center for Anti-Racist Education, said she was pleased the numbers were in- creasing. However, Matthews pointed out that enrollment of Black students was still far below national population levels, which the University pledged to work to- ward in 1970. Duderstadt said he was pleased by the progress thus far, but that there was more to be done. "We have made more progress than any university in the country as far as representation. Now the ques- tion is, how to knit-a multicultural community into a learning envi- ronment? ... We are far enough ahead that there are, no models we can look at," Duderstadt said. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students atthe University of Michigan. On-campus subscription rate for fall/Winter 91-92 is $30; all other subscriptions via first class U.S. mail, winter semester only, are $80. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Associated dollegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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News: Merav Barr, Barry Cohen, Ben Deci, Lauren Dormer, Erin Einhorn, Henry Gokiblatt Renee Huckle, Andrew L", Robin Utwin,'Travis McReynolds, Josh Mockler, Rob Patton, Melissa Peerless, Karen Pier, Mona Washi, David Rheingold, Bethany Robertson, Karen Sabgir, Gwen Shaffer, Purvi Shah, Jennifer Silverberg, Stefanie Vines, JoAnne Viviano, Ken Walter, David Wartowski, Chastity Wilson. Opinion: Matt Adler, David Leitner, Ani Rotenberg, David Shepardson. Sports: Ken Davidoff, Andy DeKortsfimberiy DeSempelaere, Matthew, Dodge, Josh Dubow, Shawn DuFre", Jim Foss, Ryan Herrington, Bruce Inosencio, Albert Lin, Dan Una, Rod Loewenthal, Sharon Lundy, Adam Miler, Rich Mitvalsky, Tim Rardin, Chad Satan, David Schechter, Eric Sklar, Tin Spolar, Andy Stabile, Ken Sugiura, Jeff Williams. Arts: Nick Arvin, Greg Baise, Margot Baumgart, Skot Beal, Kenny Bell, Jan Bilik, Andrew J. Cahn, Jonathan Chait, Richard S. Davis, Brent Edwards, Gabriel Feldberg, Rosanne Freed, Jay Garda, Lynn Geiger, Forrest Green III, Aaron Hamburger, Jonathan Higgins, Nima Hodasi, Alan J. Hogg, Roger Hsia, Marie Jacobson, Kristin Knudson, Mike Kolody, Mike Kuniavsky, Amy Meng, Jon Morgan, Liz Patton, Dan Poux, Austin Ratner, Gil Renberg, Antonio Roque, Jeff Rosenberg, Christine Slovey, Kevin Stein, Scott Sterling, Josh Worth, Kim Yaged. Photo: Brian Cantoni, Anthony M. Crdl, Michelle Guy, Doug Kanter, Heather Lowman, Sharon Mosher, Suzie Paley. The University of Michigan Department of Dermatology is seeking volunteers ages 13 - 30 nears to test new therapies for Acne. w - - - -- -- _ _ j -