Ninety-four years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCIV, No. 22-S Cpyrght 1984 The Michigan, Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, July 10, 1984 Fifteen Cents Sixteen Pages Out-state tuition to rise 7%1 'U' continues to study resident tuition levels By ANDREW ERIKSEN The tuition levels for most graduate students and out-of-state un- dergraduates will increase seven per- cent next fall under a proposal to be presented to the University regents for approval next week, according to Billy Frye, the University's vice president for academic affairs and provost. The proposal for hiking tuition for medical, law and graduate business students calls for an eight to ten percent increase, Frye said. BUT THE tuition levels* for un- dergraduate in-state students has not yet been determined, he said, because the state wants the University to keep tuition increases for in-state students low. The current level is $1,212_per term for in-staters. The out-of-state student will face a $200 increase over this year's tuition of $3,184. Last year the tuition hike averaged 9.5 percent overall. Two years ago the increase was 15 percent. If this year's proposals are approved, it will be the smallest increase since the University began having budgetery problems and began cutting schools and programs in 1980. Administrators are still contem- plating in-state tuition because it's a politcally sensitive issue, said Frye. He added that the University is con- sidering a range from zero to seven percent for in-state students. "THE ZERO'S not a fantasy number, it's a possibility," said Frye. The political overtones over the in- state tuition increase do not appear to be direct. "I haven't received any calls or letters from Lansing," said Regent Thomas Roach (D-Detroit). It appears that the University wants to send a signal to Lansing by increasing out- state tuition more than in-state. Gov. James Blanchard recommen- ded last winter that all colleges which froze tuition receive a 10 percent in- crease in state appropriations but those which didn't would receive only six percent increase. Both the House and the Senate killed Blancard's plan. Even though it died, it did have an ef- fect. Six state-supoorted colleges have Holy sm okes Associated Press Dr. Robert Runcie, the Archbishop of Canterbury, inspects damage to the South Transept of York Minister following a fire there yesterday. The fire, reportedly started by lightning, totally destroyed the transept's 13th century roof. Athletic department to help fund physical education department Frye ... says 'U' must'preserve quality announced tuition freezes for the fall term: Wayne State, Eastern Michigan, Central Michigan, and Western Michigan Universities and Ferris and Lake Superior State Colleges. "ALL OF US are sympathetic to students and parents about tuition payments," said Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor). But "the University cannot cover its costs without an in- See 'U', Page 2 Inside: . The University's School of Business is about to enter the computer age - but it will cost the students. See Page 3. The recent changes in the ex- clusionary rule by the U.S. Supreme Court are criticized. See Opinion, Page6. * Marcel Marceau is examined from two different angles. See Arts, Page 10. " More Americans are travelling through Europe than ever before. See Page 7. " Michigan diver Bruce Kimball qualifies for the Olympic team. See Sports, Page 16. Outside: Hazy, hot and humid with a high near 90 and a chance of afternoon thunderstorms. By KAREN TENSA The physical education department, which severed its ties with the School of Education over 14 months ago, will become a free standing academic unit funded in part by the athletic department, Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye said yesterday. "We believe it will be a great improvement academically," said Frye. The department is considered to be a "back door" for athletes whose academic records are too poor to be admited to other University programs. ACCORDING TO Frye, the department will no longer be a part of any school or college and will report directly to him, instead of the usual procedure of reporting to a dean, under a proposal to be presented to the University regents this week. The program, which was originally recommended for a 40 percent cut in its $1 million budget, will receive only a 30 percent slash in its budget. But the athletic department is stepping in and indirectly giving that 30 percent, or $300,000, to the program, said Frye. That money will be funnelled into the University's general fund budget and then into the program's budget. It is "roughly equivalent" to the size of the cut, he said. FOR THE regents to establish this department, they must first approve a technical change in their by-laws to allow them to set up a new academic program. If both changing the by-laws and making it an independent unit are approved, physical education will be phased in as its own program in September. Different proposals had been considered for the fate of the program, including leaving it in the School of Education, See ATHLETIC, Page 5