Gay man's bid to re-enter MSU fraternity denied EAST LANSING (UPI)- John Nowak, a gay student ousted from a Michigan State University fraternity, said yesterday he is "shocked" at a rebuff from MSU President Cecil Mackey, but torn over whether to keep fighting. Nowak and members of the campus gay community discussed the surprise decision against reinstatement at a hastily called news conference, and said lawyers from the American Civil Liberties Union are considering alter- natives for legal action. BUT NOWAK, a 20-year-old from Westland, said continuing to fight his ouster from Sigma Delta Phi presents him with a difficult personal dilemma. "It was a difficult decision to fight it" in the first place, he said. "There were a lot of other factors involved." Nowak said his father "is still having a rough time" because of the dispute. "I REALLY have to look at all the alternatives," he said. Mackey, in an apparently un- precedented move, overruled MSU's Anti-Discrimination Judicial Board which held in May that Nowak was the victim of discrimination and ordered him reinstated in the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity. The president said the MSU frater- nity system is not actually a part of the university and all MSU policies do not apply. "SOCIAL fraternities and sororities have long been recognized at MSU as having a special relationship to the university but not as being part of the university," Mackey said. "I'm quite shocked, quite distressed," Nowak said. "It really hasn't sunk in yet." While stressing he would not feel comfortable moving back into the fraternity house, Nowak said he would like to participate in its social ac- tivities. Matt Gatson of the MSU Gay-Lesbian Council said Mackey's decision means "there is going to be no recourse within the university. "If anything is to be done, it will have to be done outside the university," he said. Those attending the news conference said the ACLU is looking into the rpat- ter, and may file a lawsuit or ask the city of East Lansing to proceed under' its anti-bias ordinance. I Doily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Whitewash The neighbors that paint together stay together. At least that seems to be the case for the Woods family as they spend yesterday helping the Camden family paint their home. Court may presume Hoffa dead 4 DETROIT (UPI) - Exactly seven the parking lot of the Machus Red Fox years to the day former Teamsters Restaurant in suburban Bloomfield President Jimmy Hoffa vanished Township. without a trace, the legal process began Authorities have said they believe yesterday to have the longtime labor Hoffa went to meet Anthony "Tony boss officially declared dead. Jack" Giacalone, reputed Detroit "It is the end of a long, hard road," crime syndicate figure. Giacalone said his son, James Hoffa Jr. "We have denied it. no hope left at all. We assume he's dead. INVESTIGATORS and Hoffa's son "This is a very difficult thing to do," believe the reason for the abduction and Hoffa, a Detroit attorney, said as he presumed murder was Hoffa's attempt prepared to petition Oakland County to regain control of the giant inter- Probate Court to declare presumption national union. of death. Hoffa got his start at Local 299 in UNDER Michigan law, heirs must Detroit and served as international wait seven years before taking such ac- union president from 1957 until he was tion. sent to prison in 1967 on bribery and Hoffa disappeared July 30, 1975, from fraud charges. House votes to supplement (Continued tram Page 1) against which 1983-84 proposals would Passage of the supplemental bills be made. might have an impact on 1983-84 finan- cial aid legislation, according to Butts. Mike Riksen, legislative director for "If it passes the Seante and it is signed Pursell, said he expected the Senate to into law, it would send a clear signal to act on the bills sometime next week. the White Bouse about their proposals "My inclination is that it will pass," he (for 1983-84) of last February" said. "IT WOULD also increase The draft authorization bill, which Congressioml awareness of public con- unless vetoed by the president goes into cern aboutffunding education," he said. effect on July 1, 1983, was passed by a Additional funds, he added, would also "substantial margin," Butts said. . cre ae the appropriations base According to Grotrian, the financial Frank Fitzsimmons then took over but when Hoffa's sentence was com- muted by President Richard Nixon in 1971, Hoffa announced intention to retake control. After his disappearance, the FBI launched its biggest manhunt in history. They checked thousands of tips, including rumors he was buried in a vacant lot in suburban Detroit, that his body was burned in an incinerator in nearby Southfield or dumped in a trash heap in New Jersey. Earlier this summer, a organized crime informant testified before a Senate committee that Hoffa was or- dered killed by Fitzsimmons, and his body dumped in a Florida swamp. I ... missing seven years student financial aid funds aid office is opposed to the bill, which administer. "There's no way in the requires male students to prove they world federal computers can match have registered for the draft before student recipients with Selective Ser- being eligible for aid. vice files," he said, adding that the "WE WOULD be opposed to that kind process would be "very complex, very of eligibility criteria," Grotrian said, expensive, and very time consuming." adding there would be "extreme dif- The bill was hotly debated in ficulty in verifying the students' Congress, according to Butts who said registration." many congressmen felt the bill singled "Administratively" he said, "it out a specific class of citizens. wouldbe a nightmare." Butts agreed that such a requirement It does have an income would be difficult for the University to discriminatory festure, Grotriangaid. i