Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, August 6, 1983 'U' keeps out-state students at legal limit (Continued from Page 1) "We're letting the out-of-state per- centage creep up slowly, but I would not endorse a plan to raise it as high as 40 percent," Sjogren said. SJOGREN SAID the University decides on what percentage of out-of- state students to accept by "the need for money." "It's a financially based decision," he said. Sjogren said that the University will not simply admit out-of-state students without considering their academic qualifications. "We would never cut the academic quality of incoming students for money," he said. "Out-of-state students have had, on the average, consistently higher overall skills," he added. Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs and provost, said, "The University has a number of proposals for raising the percentage of out-of-state students, but currently has no policy or formal limits on that per- centage." "Increasing the number of out-of- state students has been proposed to of- fset costs," he said. BY FAR THE highest percentage of out-state students is found in the University's, Law School, which has about a 50-50 ratio, according to Sue Mims, director of academic planning and analysis. Each out-of-state law stadents brings in $2,000 more in tuition money than an in-state student. But that high ratio in a state- supported university has brought about opposition from some who felt Michigan citizens shouldn't subsidize the education of out-of-state students. STATE SENATOR Arthur Miller (D- Warren) tried to require the Law School to reduce its out-of-state enrollment to 25 percent in June. Miller proposed an amendment to the state appropriations for higher education bill calling for the Law School to reduce its out-of-state percen- tage, but the amendment failed. Although the University as a whole is keeping to the 25 percent out-of-state figure, discussing figures such as the Law School makes some University's officials uncomfortable. "It's not to the University's benefit to continue to air in the press the Law School's numbers," Mims said. The University's largest unit, the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, has a 27 percent out-of-state enrollment. Peter Steiner, dean of the college, would not comment on the figure. FALL/WINTER HOUSING IN RESIDENCE HALLS SPACE CURRENTLY REMAINS AVAILABLE IN BAITS AND OXFORD HALLS COME IN TO APPLY AND BE PLACED TODAY OR CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION HOUSING INFORMATION 1011 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING HOURS: 7:30 a.m. - 12:00 Noon 12:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. MONDAY-FRIDAY TELEPHONE: (313) 763-3164 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports July jobless rates plunge LANSING - Michigan's adjusted unemployment rate dropped sharply from 15.2 percent in June to 13.1 percent last month, exceeding the cautious expectations of state government economists. Michigan's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate, while still highest among the nation's 10 largest states and above the national rate of 9.5 per- cent, was well below last July's 14.7 percent. S. Martin Taylor, Director of the state Labor Department and Michigan Employment Security Commission, said the decline was unexpected since joblessness usually increases in July. This year, he said, seasonal hiring gains in the construction and service in- dustries along with a somewhat mysterious decline in the labor force helped account for the development. The national jobless rate, adjusted for seasonal factors, plunged a half percentage point from June's 10 percent level, the largest one-month drop since December 1959, as the size of the civilian work force, which includes both people with jobs and people seeking them, remained steady. S. Korean troops sink spy ship SEOUL, South Korea - South Korean troops, planes, and patrol boats sank a North Korean "spy boat" and killed four commando frogmen who tried to land yesterday near a nuclear power plant on the southeast coast, the Defense Ministry reported. Gen. Lee Ki-baek, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the bodies of the communist agents were recovered from the water, along with arms, un- derwater diving gear, a radio transmitter, a poisoned needle and other items. Lee gave no details of the sinking of the North Korean boat or the frogmen's attempted landing, but the Yonhap news agency reported from the Wolsong area that the landing attempt was made about 1 a.m. It gave this account: Marines guarding the shore detected some movement in the water 5 yards from the beach line, alerted their superior officers, and after a few minutes threw hand grenades and opened fire. AT & T faces strike deadline WASHINGTON - American Telephone & Telegraph Co. and three unions, negotiating the year's largest labor contract, were mired in low-level sub- committee meetings yesterday as the current pact neared expiration. Facing a threatened strike at 12:01 a.m. EDT tomorrow by its largest union, the Communications Workers of America, AT & T management con- tinued to talk optimistically of prospects for a peaceful settlement. But the leadership of the CWA sent word to its locals to brace for a walkout. Arthur Perry, a top negotiator with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers exclaimed: "I don't know how we got into this crisis bargaining. But nothing's happening." Charles Dynes, a Bell System spokesman, said, "I'm still convinced that we're going to have a contract sometime Saturday... We're pretty sure we know what they want, and that they know what we want. What we're trying to do is put together a package that will satisfy both sides." Explosions kill 20 in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon - Explosions rocked Lebanon's three largest cities yesterday, killing at least 20 people, in a wave of terrorist violence that dramatized the nation's deteriorating state of security. The worst blast, packed in a car, occurred amid a crowd of worshippers and children outside a mosque in the Syrian-controlled northern city of Tripoli, killing at least 19 people and wounding 38 others, state-run Beirut radio said. Twelve hours later a bomb in Beirut went off inside a four-story building in the Christian neighborhood of Ain Rumaneh, killinga 17-year-old girl, woun- ding five people and collapsing one side of the building, the radio said. In the southern coastal city of Sidon, a third explosion damaged a Lebanese police station, an Israeli military spokesman said. The state-run radio said Lebanese patrolmen who arrived at the building were fired upon but no one was injured. Libya backs Upper Volta coup Upper Volta - Former Prime Minister Thomas Sankara, reportedly using Libyan-supplied arms, overthrew Upper Volta's military government in a bloody coup yesterday that left 13 people dead and 15 wounded. It was the second African uprising currently reported to have the backing of Libya's Col. Moammar Khadafy, who is also active in Chad's civil war. The coup, which took place on the 20th anniversary of the West African country's independence from France, came two days after the State Depar- tment warned of "a continent-wide pattern of Libyan destabilization." Sankara, a 35-year-old Marxist army captain who was ousted in May from the post of prime minister and jailed by President Jean-Baptiste Ouedraogo, claimed success in staging the country's second coup in eight months. There was shooting through much of the night Thursday, and yesterday morning Voltans awoke to military music on the state-owned radio interrup- ted by denunciations of the "colonialist" regime that had been deposed. I 4 I 4 4 .4 4 4 4