Iti Un t Wmther Tonigt: Partly cloudy, low around 20. Tomorrow: Partly sunny, high around 42. One hundred frve years ofeditonalfreedom Monday .March 11,1996 Vol cv3 No M tankers qualify for Olymipics By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor INDIANAPOLIS - Two hours af- ter Michigan's John Piersma etched his name into American swimming his- t ,he watched an artist paint his name .,the wall of champions. Each athlete who qualifies for a trip to Atlanta gets his or her name placed forever on the wall of the Indiana Uni- versity Natatorium where the U.S. Olympic swimming trials are being held. "It'sjust indescribable," Piersma said. "It feels like it's not for real, but I know it is. I don't know how to act or what to think ... It's really exciting to know I'm part of the team." *Piersmajoined past Olympians on the all Wednesday night, but four other Wolverines have followed him since. Michigan sophomore Tom Dolan has qualified in two events so far. Fresh- man Tom Malchow-grabbed a spot on the team with an upset victory Satur- day. In addition, former Wolverines Eric Namesnik and Eric Wunderlich have completed their quest for a chance to represent the United States. *The Wolverines have the largest con- tingency of swimmers of any school or club at Indianapolis. Michigan may put even more athletes on the U.S. squad. The trials are far from over - several events remain in the seven-day meet, which concludes tomorrow night. "We have shown how strong our pro- gram is here," said Michigan men's swimming coach Jon Urbanchek, who is expected to be named a U.S. Olympic istantcoach tomorrow. "Putting five ' six people on the Olympic team will help our recruiting down the road. It shows how great our kids are." Dolan may be the greatest kid. The See TRIALS, Page 7B Blue to meet Longhorns in NCAA tourney By Brent McIntosh Daily Sports Editor Although several thousand Fridays ago Texas was a nation of its own, this Friday it's nothing more than the next opponent for the Michigan men's bas- ketball team. The NCAA Men's Basketball Com- mittee announced its NCAA Division I Championship selections at 6:30 p.m. yesterday. The committee seeded Michigan at No. 7 in the Midwest Re- gional and sent the Wolverines to Milwaukee's Bradley Center to face the 10th-seeded Texas Longhorns on Friday. "I was hoping for somewhere warm, but it's close to home, so we'll have a lot of fans," Michigan captain Dugan Fife said. Gametime will be announced today or tomorrow, but tickets will not be made available to students. The top seed in the Wolverines' re- gional is the nation's top-ranked team, Kentucky. Joining the Wildcats as re- gional No. 1 seeds are Massachusetts, Connecticut and Big Ten champion Purdue. At fifth place in the conference, the Wolverines (10-8 Big Ten, 20-11 over- all) were the least successful Big Ten team to make the tourney. They secured their berth with a win over Wisconsin on Saturday. Still, Michigan coach Steve Fisher said he was pleased to see the Wolverines in what pundits call "the big dance." "You always cheer when you see your name come up, whether you know you're going, or whether you're hold-., ing your breath," Fisher said. For part of the season, the Wolver- ines were indeed holding their collec- tive breath. With five losses in six games during the heart of the conference sea- son, Michigan's bid remained in doubt until they beat the Badgers this week- end. "I'm just grateful to be in atall," Fife said. "At some points this yearit seemed in doubt." What's not in doubt is that Texas will serve as a worthy foe. The speedy Long- horns nearly beat No. 3-seeded Michi- gan two years ago in the tournament before falling 84-79; this season's Tex- ans are 20-9 and still fast. "They're an uptempo team," Michigan's Maurice Taylor said. "They have a great guard, Reggie Freeman. He can penetrate, hit thejumper. That's who we'll probably concentrate on." Freeman averaged 22.8 points and seven rebounds per game this season. He also hit 84 3-pointers for the 'horns, but the 6-foot-6 junior guard n-ay well be Texas' lone star. Only senior for- ward Sonny Alvarado consistently joined Freeman in scoring double fig- ures; Alvarado is the Longhorns' lead- ing rebounder with 8.6 boards per game. Michigan's leading rebounder, on the other hand, said he wants a win against Texas so he can face one of the nation's top rebounders. Should Taylor and the rest of the Wolverines win Friday, they would probably play No. 2 seed Wake Forest, team of preseason All-Ameri- can Tim Duncan. Taylor said before the season he wanted to face Duncan in the tournament. "Beat Texas, and I get my wish," Taylor said. NOPPORN KICHANANTHA/Daily Maurice Taylor and the Michigan men's basketball team hope to "mess with Texas" in the NCAA Tournament. Students face delays in financial aid JONATHAN LURE/Daify 23 arrested in Detroit Newspapers protest Police officers carry away a protester outside The Detroit News building at about 7 a.m. last Wednesday. About 600 protesters chanted, sang and spoke in support of the workers who went on strike in July, and some 200 protesters later marched several blocks to a union hall. Officers arrested 23 protesters, including City Council President Maryann Mahaffey and Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, for disorderly conduct after they blocked driveways. U.S. News ranks 'U' grad schools bigher By Stephanie Jo Klein Daily Staff Reporter As students fill out forms and rush to meet deadlines for financial aid appli- cations they often worry their requests will be denied. This year, computer problems at the U.S. Department of Education and sev- eral government shutdowns have left students wondering if their aid requests will even be pro- A cessed. Almost one million -AS Wit closetohalfofthe total - aid appli- new cOfljl cations have been yt delayed so far. emy Thomas Butts,p roblems the University's associate vice #u president for gov- ermn eainsaid the problems Associate vic stemmed from govern two modifications to a system that had worked well for many years. Butts said the government switched private-sector contractors that process the aid forms and also changed the technology used to process the infor- mation. Instead of typing in the data from students' forms, the Department of Education now optically scans data into the computer system. "As with any new computer system, there are problems with start-up," Butts said. Unfortunately, he said, the 21 days of government shutdown prevented of- ficials from diagnosing and addressing the problems when they originally hap- pened. The Department of Education is tI i th r1 en working hard, Butts said, to alleviate the pressure for students. On Friday, the department announced plans to dra- matically increase its processing speed by today -jumping from only 20,000- 30,000 forms per day to more than 100,000 per day. The expected date of complete re- covery is April 15, only two weeks before the national enrollment decision date of May 1, when most col- i any leges require en- rollment deposits Ovter to be paid. Judith Harper; interimdirector l w t the University's WB Office of Finan- cial Aid, said the first two weeks of Thomas Butts March is the tra- Spresident for ditional time that nent S initial responses trelations totheFreeAppli- cation for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) are mailed out from universities. The Department of Education has assured that aid renewal applicants and students who file electronically will not encounter any untimely difficulties be- cause of the problems with the paper forms. Butts said that although 60 percent of applicants use paper forms to apply for federal aid, the largest potential prob- lem will arise for incoming students- many of whom base their college deci- sion on financial aid packages. In particular, some parents are con- cerned that the delay could seriously impact the timeliness of theirchildren's See AID, Page 2A Jeff Eldridge Daily Staff Reporter When U.S. News & World Report released its annual rankings for gradu- ate and professional schools last Wednesday, the University's standing jumped in almost every category. The most significant improvements. came forthe School of Education, which was ranked ninth, up from last year's position of 22nd, and the College of gineering, which placed at No. 5 in t e nation, up from No. 8. The School of Information and Li- brary Studies was ranked second in the country. This category has never been ranked before. "These releases are followed very closely by people in higher education," said Associate Vice President for Univer- sity Relations Lisa Baker. "The U.S. News survey is areputational survey, relying on perceptual judgments, in large part." The weekly newsmagazine weighs factors like student selectivity, place- ment success and academic reputation to formulate the standings ofthe schools. Cecil Miskel, dean of the School of Education, said faculty efforts contrib- utedto the school'sjump in the rankings. "I think the faculty in particular have been working quite hard in recruiting and building programs," Miskel said. "I think the rankings reflect this." Law School Dean Jeffrey Lehman said the method used to determine the rankings is flawed. "It would be wonderful if a serious analyst would provide these prospec- tive students with information and guid- ance that will really help the... Sad to say, U.S. News doesn't come close to doing the job," Lehman said. "(There is) no analysis. Just an an- nual computer-generated list, based on a mechanical formula thatincorporates so many methodological problems - wrong questions, missing questions, indefensible biases, random factor weightings, false precision, etc.-as to be laughable." U.S. News ranked the University's Law School seventh in the nation. William Martin, Engineering associ- ate dean for academic affairs, also ques- tioned the weighting of the various at- tributes. "1 certainly have a lot of questions about the methodology and the statisti- See RANKINGS, Page 2A Grad School Rankings Here are the U.S. News & World Report rankings for the University. Last year's ranks are in parentheses. Education: 9 (22) Engineering: 5 (8) Business: 12 (11) Medicine: 9 (10) Law: 7 ($) Library and Information Studies: 2 .(ot ranked previously) The top in each category were: Education: Harvard Engineering: MIT Business: Stanford Medicine: Harvard Library and Information Studies: University of Illinois Law: Yale Rose, Mehta to represent Michigan Party on ballot 'U' signs $87K contract with presidential search consulting firm - By Laurie Mayk Daily Staff Reporter As the last major party to announce its candidates, the Michigan Party re- aled its presidential ticket for the ichigan Student Assembly shortly before break. LSA Reps. Fiona Rose and Probir Mehta, the Michigan Party's candidates for MSA president and vice president, respectively, said the party held its an- nouncement to present a unified front and an entire slate. The ticket's strength is the candi- dates' experience within and beyond *e assembly, said Mehta, an LSA junior. "We both have one foot in the assem- bly, and one foot in the student body," he said. "Our experiences aren't just within MSA," said Rose, an LSA sopho- mnre "We've hard exerience with mester. Mehta left the Students' Party for the Michigan Party about two months ago. "There's no wrongdoing in going to where your ideas mesh best," Rose said. "The difference between parties is the people involved." This year's campaign will be dif- ferent than the one she ran with Stu- dents' Party member Brian Elliot, she said. "My presidential campaign wasn't positive - that was my downfall. We spent more time tearing down the assembly and building up ourselves," she said. LSA Rep. Olga Savic, Students' Party candidate for MSA president, worked on the Elliot-Rose campaign. "At the time I had full confidence in her and now I have my doubts," Savic said. Althouih Rose and Mehta were the Agreement stipulates MacKay keep details confidential By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter The University will pay presidential search consultant Malcolm MacKay more than $85,000 to help find the next president. The contact signed between MacKay and the University before spring break states that the consultant will receive about $86,666.67. This figure is based on one-third of the assumed annual salary of the next president, which is currently estimated at $260,000. Presi- dent James Duderstadt, who announced that MacKay will keep details about the search confidential, except information that can be made public as required by law. "I am guessing the confidentiality of information is something (the Univer- sity) wanted in there," said Vice Presi- dent for University Relations Walter Harrison. A section in the contract frees the University from liabilityregarding state- ments or actions- that MacKay makes during the search. The University will not be responsible forMacKay'sactivi- ties when he recruits and meets with potential candidates. Harrison said most of the contract is standard. He did not know how long the two parties discussed the terms of the LSA Reps. Probir Mehta and Fiona Rose will run on the Michigan Party ticket in the upcoming Michigan Student Assembly elections. Savic also expressed concern in their ability to "mobilize the assembly be- hind them." "(Rose) has a lot of great ideas, but she's alienated a lot of people on the assembly," Schor asserted. "She would tives and efforts to reduce textbook prices should play important roles in promoting "student wellness," Rose said. Mehta said the ticket plans on work- ing with the University's administra- I ,