Ask a parent: Orientation to 'U' not child's play by any means By JOYCE FRIEDEN "How important is a grade point average when ap- plying to graduate school?" "I've heard that most of the teaching is done by TAs - is that true?" "What are co-ed dorms like?" These were some of the questions asked at an orien- tation session held in the Kuenzel Room of the Michigan Union Tuesday night. The session's two leaders patiently soothed the anxieties of the 20 per- sons attending the affair, as they would at any other gathering of orientees. BUT THIS WASN'T a run-of-the-mill orientation session. Many of the persons at the event were attired in leisure suits or double knit pants outfits. Some spor-. ted pot bellies, others had hair highlighted with spots of grey near the temples. Their average age ap- peared to be about 40. The session was the final item on the agenda of one of the University's three-day parent = orientation programs. During the visits, parents are given tours of North and Central campuses and are treated to in- formational talks concerning financial aid, coun- seling, health service, and other aspects of the University, while their sons and daughters attend similar freshpersons orientation programs. "WE ARE NOT doing this, as a public relations gimmick," explained University Director of Orien- tation Don Perigo. "We want to make the parent a better support system for the student." Perigo has been the program's director for 10 years. He estimated the University has offered the service to parents for about 12 years. Orientation leader Denise Meisel, agreed with Perigo. "Some people think we try to 'whitewash' the University, but that's not true at all," the LSA junior said. "We tell them what really happens." Some of the topics included in Tuesday night's discussion were those normally considered to be sen- sitive, such as the prevalence of drug use and sexual See PARENTS, Page 6 The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 50-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, July 31; 1980 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Official: Bill lied to Justice examners From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Billy Carter lied to Justice Department investigators last January about whether he had received payments from the - Libyan gover- nment, a Justice Department official said yesterday. In an interview, Joel Lisker, head of A the Justice Department's foreign agen- is registration section, said 17 days af- ter Billy Carter had deposited his first check from the Libyans, the president's AP Photo brother denied to him having received any money from the Arab nation. SEN. BIRCH BAYH (D-Ind.), chairman of a special subcommittee created LISKER SAID he had obtained to investigate the connection between the Libyan government and President Tuesday a deposit slip showing that Carter's brother Billy, slams a gavel on Capitol Hill Tuesday, officially opening Billy Carter had deposited his first the first meeting of the subcommittee. At right is Sen. Strom Thurmond payment from the Libyans ina Georgia (R-S.C.) bankonDec. 3oflastyear. Fe N storm id The president's brother could not immediately be reached for comment on Lisker's statements, Lisker said when he interviewed Billy Carter in his home in Georgia on Jan. 16, Billy had denied receiving any money from the Libyans. "There's no doubt he knew at the time that he had received the money," Lisker said. WHEN BILLY Carter settled a civil suit with the Justice Department on July 14, he filed a sworn registration statement saying the first payment of $20,000 from the Libyans was made in January. Lisker said willfully filing a false registration statement carries a maximum criminal penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. But Lisker said the president's brother was off by one day. "I'm not going to go off on something like that. He didn't have the deposit slip when he made the registration statement." LISKER SAID although lying to federal investigators is a crime, under current court rulings flowing from the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination it would not be See OFFICIAL, Page 2 Details inside, Page 3