Batsmen split with MSU See page 16 Ninety-four years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCIV, No. 2-S Copyright 1984 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, May 6, 1984 FREE ISSUE Sixteen Pages f I 'U' quality depends on state aid, Shapiro says By GEORGEA KOVANIS. Special to the Daily LANSING - The University will not remain ranked as one of the best public colleges in the nation unless the state boosts appropriations for higher education, said University President Harold Shapiro Friday. According to Shapiro, the state legislature has not allocated the funds necessary to maintain the quality of higher education. "We are disinvesting in education," Shapiro said to members of the state's Senate Appropriations Committee at a hearing in the Capitol Building. "If this trend continues, we're not going to remain in a leadership position," he added. SHAPIRO SAID the state has forced the University to rely on jacking up tuition in recent years to make up for inadequate increases in state ap- See STATE, Page 4 McCormick, Turner to turn pro By PAUL HELGREN They were thousands of miles apart, but Tim McCormick and Eric Turner reached the same decision - both will forego a final year of basketball eligibility at Michigan to try their luck in the NBA draft to be held June 19. Turner, a junior, mailed a letter to the NBA from Amster- dam on Friday informing the league of his decision. The 6-3 guard is in Europe on a 10-day tour with the Michigan basketball team. His decision means he cannot compete in any of the Wolverines' scheduled seven exhibition games. MCCORMICK, a senior who sat outa year due to a knee in- jury and thus has an extra year of eligibility, announced yesterday that he would pass up his final season at Michigan and enter the draft. Though a senior, McCormick could not have been selected unless he announced his intentions to turn professional. The 6-11 power forward/center had originally planned to stay in school but changed his mind when the University's graduate school rejected his application for admission. The players' decisions ended weeks of vacillation and speculation. They enter a draft pool that includes other un- derclassmen, most notably consensus college player of the year Michael Jordan of North Carolina, Houston center Akeem Olajuwon and Auburn's 265-pound forward Charles Barkley. See 'M', Page 13 Daily Photo by REBECCA KNIGHT Up, up and away! Hot air balloons lift off yesterday from the Saline Farm Council Grounds in hot pursuit of each other. The 20-balloon race is part of the Great Chili Cook-off - Hot air balloon festival weekend. Proceeds from the festival will go to the National Kidney Foundation of Michigan. . r Mondale, Jackson claim victories AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - The Rev. Jesse Jackson, riding the crest of a massive black turnout, won the Louisiana Democratic primary yester- day for his second consecutive electoral victory in the race for his party's presidential nomination. Sen. Gary Hart ran second and Walter Mondale a surprising third. NO RESULTS were available from the Democratic caucuses in Texas, where Mondale was claiming a decisive victory over Hart, his nearest rival in the national delegate count. CBS News said a survey of a representative number of voters en- tering selected precinct sites indicated Pope fired at SEOUL, South Korea (UPI) - A young man jumped from a crowd of spec- tators and fired a toy pistol at Pope John Paul II in a downtown Seoul street today, Korea 'government officials said. The pope was not injured and con- tinued unfazed with his schedule. Vice Foreign Affairs Minister Lee Sang Ok said the pistol was a $4 metal object that used a plastic capsule filled with a small explosive charge to 41 percent of those attending the caucus were for Mondale and that Hart and Jackson each had the backing of 26 per- cent of those attending. Based on that projection, and his own figures, Mondale claimed a "very big win" in Texas even before any actual caucus figures were reported. HE DECLINED to comment on Louisiana, saying "Let me wait and see what the results are." Five days ago, Jackson easily carried the District of Columbia. With 80 percent of Louisiana's 3,169 precincts reporting, the vote stood this way: ' Jackson 98,310 or 40 percent. with toy gun simulate gunfire. WITNESSES who saw the incident could not tell whether the gun was real or a toy and broke into panic at. the sound of the gunfire. The young man shouted "manse," Korean for "long life," and tried to flee but was captured by police, the wit- nesses said. See MAN, Page 2 " Hart 64,489 or 27 percent. " Mondale 55,905 or 23 percent. The News Election Service projected Jackson would win 26 of the. 57 Louisiana delegates at stake Saturday, Hart 19 and Mondale 12. Hart needed a strong showing in both Texas and Louisiana to blunt Mondale's drive for the nomination. Jackson, who won the District of Columbia's primary Tuesday, was counting on a large turnout of black voters in the Louisiana primary and hoping Texas Hispanics would join his Rainbow Coalition. At stake in Louisiana were 57 delegates. Inside: The annual spring sublet crunch has left some students searching for tenants while others seek rooms. See page 2. Stanley Kaplan talks about preparing for college entrance examinations. See Opinion, page 6. Notre Dame students rally against the new alcohol policy forbidding drinking at dorm parties. See Colleges, page 7. Swing Shift is not the happy movie the title implies - in fact, it's depressing. See Arts, page 10. Outside: Cloudy with occasional rains and a high near 60. SUBSCRIBE 1I Cal 11764-0558