Expelled student sues By KAREN TENSA Sa S he " n o t cle .t Berggren would not comment further A University student, expelled last Y on the charges in the suit. year for allegedly cheating on a STATISTICS Prof. Ed Rothman statistics exam, is suing the University right to an attorney and never received a legal trial." reported to the board in April 1982 that for $10,000 charging that he didn't an explanation for being dismissed. "No legal representation is allowed," Jaksa cheated on a final exam virtually receive a fair trial. Jaksa is demanding that his he added. putting his name on another student's The suit, filed yesterday in U.S. academic records be cleared and he is BUT JAKSA'S attorney, Kurt exam. District Court by LSA Senior calling for a new trial and $10,000 in Berggren said "It's outrageous that Rothman said he had "good eviden- Christopher Jaksa, charges that the students aren't allowed to have ce" that Jaksa put a cover sheet on University's Academic Judiciary im- damages. . lawyers." another student's exam adding that the properly carried out hearings in June Eugene Nissen, Head of Academic "It's a frightening thing to appear judiciary reached the correct decision. 1982. Judiciary would not comment on the before this board and most students I fai JAKSA, currently a resident advisor suit yesterday but he said that students could use some guidance," Berggren See TUD , agvery fr in West Quad, claims he was denied the receive an "academic hearing and not said. See STUDENT, Page 7 The Michigan Daily Vol. XCIII, No. 28-S Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, July 28, 1983 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Stats lab may be replaced By CHERYL BAACKE The University's Statistical Research Laboratory (SRL) may be closed down and replaced by a much larger statistics center, if the recommen- dations of a review committee are adopted. The committee, which completed its report in May, suggested that the University close the current laboratory, replace it with a statistical con- sulting center and shift its computer respon- sibilities to the University Computing Center. BY SHIFTING the computer work to the Com- puting Center, the committee said it wants the lab to return to its primary mission of research and consulting. If the executive officers agree to the proposal, it will cost the University an extra $105,000 accor- ding to the panel's estimates. The laboratory as it exists now, provides statistical consulting to students and faculty, as well as developing computer programs for researchers. But the panel noted that many units in the Univ- See STATS, Page 4 University has dropped from 6.9 in 1977 iversity to 5.2 percent. tudents, Although officials in 1970 pledged to number increase black enrollment to 10 per- cent, the University is a long way from eshmen its goal. ity than UNDER THE six-year-old "Each rtof Ad- one, reach one" program, currently enrolled minority students submit to ve paid the admissions office names of high ear, said school seniors or transfer students that se iden- they believe to be potential applicants. ications About 1,400 currently enrolled t year. minority students were contacted this e added year, but only 53 replied compared to mpts to 300 in 1982. Those students recommen- spite at ded 186 potential minority applicants. at the See MINORITIES, Page 2 Taking it easy Ann Arbor youngsters Rhona, Jerry, and Alicia McNair (left to right), surrender their clothes to the midafternoon heat yesterday as they takea break on N. Fifth Street. Black students applying to 'U' drop this year By JACKIE YOUNG "Each one, reach one," a Un program for recruiting black st failed this year to increase thej of black freshmen applicants. This year fewer black frf students applied to the Univers in 1982, said Associate Directo missions Lance Erickson. ABOUT 4,300 freshmen ha' their enrollment deposits this ye Erickson, and only 155 of tho tifying themselves on their appli were black, compared to 169 last "Each one, reach one," can be to the University's list of atte boost black enrollment. But de, tempts, black enrollment