The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 12, 1981-Page 3 ELEVEN PERCENT MORE SEEK ADMISSION Surge in 'U' applications By ANN MARIE FAZIO The number of persons applying to the University ! for enrollment as freshmen next fall is about 11 per- cent more than the number of freshman applications received by this same time last year, University ad- missions officials said yesterday. The number of applications is "much more than expected," Associate Director of Admissions Lance Erickson said, adding that he hasn't seen such a large increase in 10 years. ERNEST ZIMMERMAN, assistant to the vice- president for academic affairs, cited bleak economic conditions and a shrinking job market as possible factors behind the application hike. Students may be thinking "there's no place to go (to get a job) so they might as well go to college," Zimmermann said. Erickson agreed that the economic crunch could be spurring an increase in college applicants, par- ticularly in the number of returning students. THE UNIVERSITY'S prestige may be another fac- tor, Erickson said, adding that more college-bound students may be choosing the University of Michigan over Michigan State University because of "the bad press that MSU has gotten this past year." The application increase however, does not necessarily mean higher Fall 1981 enrollment, of- ficials cautioned. The University is "trying to control enrollment," Erickson said. The administration is "shooting for a target (enrollment figure) that is about the same as last year," he added. ZIMMERMANN CALLED THE increase "irrelevant," explaining that the University always gets more than enough qualified applicants, but doesn't want to increase its enrollment. Also, many students may be mailing applications to more than one school in search of the best financial aid package, Zimmerman said. This influx of multiple applications may appear to be an increase in the number of college applicants, both Erickson and Zimmenmann agreed. Although the number of applications is up, "the ones who count are the ones who pay the (enrollment) deposit," Erickson said. "It doesn't look like we'd be up (in enrollment) substantially." Without knowing the actual reasons for the ap- plication hike, Erickson couldn't determine the wider implications of the application hike. If it turns out that more people want to expand their educations, Erickson said he would be "enthusiastic." As it is now, however, the increase has some bad ef- fects, Erickson said. "We don't want to turn away good students," he said, which is sometimes the case. Mr. Bullard goes to Washington? State rep. begins quest for U.S. Congress seat By STEVE HOOK Although next year's election is still more than 500 days away, Perry Bullard has already begun his cam- paign. R .llard. the Ann Arbor Democrat currently serving his fifth term as the district's state represen- tative, will not be seeking a sixth term, however. Instead, his attention has shifted to Washington D.C. and the U.S. Congress - "where the action is," he declares. HE HAS CONCLUDED that state economic issues are better perceived as national issues, and that foreign policy considerations are too compeling for him to ignore in Lansing. He has also concluded that the Reagan ad- ministration is regressive, both politically and morally, and that its "vicious policies" will inevitably fail. In their place, he has an armload of programs, policies, and proposals that he hopes to carry with him to Washington if elected, most of them following his liberal line measure for measure. He comes to an interview this Friday morning replete with a "biographical fact sheet," a six-year breakdown of "Bullard-Sponsored Laws," two public relations releases describing his recent legislative exploits, a few recent ar- ticles from the Ann Arbor News (among them a laudatory editorial regarding his emphasis on rebuilding the American Northeast), and copies of his office's pamphlets on lobbying and using the Freedom of Informatibn Act. Despite the early hour, his manner is brisk and emphatic, as is customary. "WE CAN'T SOLVE the 15 percent unemployment problem here in Michigan," he says, "but with the federal Congress, with administrative leadership in Washington, we can have better policies. The Reagan policies go exactly in the wrong direction, so I think we need to join the fight at the federal level." As Bullard sees it, the Reagan ad- ministration will be harming individual states by depriving them of federal assistance; Washington "considers government the problem, not the solution," he says. "Returning things to the states is fine, but with a national economy, you need strong national standards, effec- five agencies. The Reagan ad- ministration's plan has been to, rather than reform these agencies, to chop them off." NOW 38 YEARS OLD, Bullard's local reputation reflects his liberal views, and he has banked on solid student sup- port from the University - he has received it - for each of his five suc- cessful state campaigns. His promotion of lenient marijuana laws, tenants' rights, and alternate energy grants, as well as his recent anti-apartheid effor- ts, have won him a loyal constituency. And at the state capitol, Bullard's See BULLARD, Page 6 Photo by DAVID C STATE REP. PERRY BULLARD (D-Ann Arbor) discusses his recently- launched drive for a seat in the U.S. Congress. WCB N refutes charges By SUE INGLIS In response to a Federal Communications Com- mission inquiry, WCBN-FM, the University's student-run radio station, has refuted charges that the station violated a number of federal broadcast regulations. According to attorney Daniel Toohey of the Washington-based law firm Dow, Lohnes, and Alber- tson, the only evidence that WCBN's activities were inconsistent with FCC regulations were "minor, low- grade irregularities," if indeed the radio station was in violation of any broadcast regulations at all. TOOHEY PREPARED the rebuttal on behalf of WCBN and its licensees-the University Regents. The charges were filed with the FCC by six former and current employees of the station on January 11. The rebuttal, filed with the FCC last month, has been referred to one of the commission's lawyers who will examine the document and advise the FCC, ac- cording to Stephen Sewell, assistant chief of the FCC's Complaints and Compliance Division. SEWELL SAID he has no idea when the com- mission will make a final decision on the matter, but stressed that there are thousands of inquiries made each year such as the one conducted at WCBN. See WCBN, Page 11