Ninety-four years of editorial freedom Vol. XCIV, No. 23-S Copyight 1984 The Mchign Doil Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, July 13, 1984 Fifteen Cents Sixteen Pages In-state tuition frozen Grad., out-of-state rates to rise 7- By ANDREW ERIKSEN The University regents this morning are expected to approve a recommen- dation that tuition rates for un- dergraduates who are state residents not be increased for the coming school year. The University's executive officers made the recommendation yesterday to freeze tuition for in-state students as a show of appreciaton for efforts by the Governor and the state legislature to increase state funding of the Univer- sity. The proposed. tuition hikes for graduate students are: " 9.2 percent for business students; '9 percent for denistry; Y 9.4 percent for law; and * 9.7 percent for medicine. Tuition for all other students is expec- ted to increase by seven percent, which will mean a non-resident un- dergraduate will pay about $200 more per term. "Unless substantial additional state support is soon forthcoming however, 10 percent significant increases in tuition will be required. The .essential effect on our budgetary stragedy this year is to 'pass through' to the students a substantial share of the incremental state ap- propriation," said Billy Frye, vice president and academic provost for the University in a written proposal to the Regents. EARLIER THIS year the University requested a budget increase of $40.3 million from the state. But the legislature appropriated only a $16.3 million increase for the next fiscal year, setting this year's total state payment to the University at $182.1 million. State support for the Univer- sity has fallen from 73 percent of the general budget to 49 percent, according to Frye. The University doesn't have the capacity to continue to absorb declining state support, said Frye. The surpluses have dried up. See IN-STATE, Page 4 Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale and Rep. Geraldine Ferraro receive applause from an audience at the Minnesota State Capitol yesterday following Mondale's announcement that Ferraro would be his vice presidential candidate. Flerraro picked as first woman V.P. ca didate Athletic dept. funding for phys. ed. approved By KAREN TENSA tion. Final action is expected in Sep- The University regents yesterday tember. unanimously approved "in principle" a For the division to be set up as an in- plan to make the physical education dependent, degree granting unit, the department an independent academic regents must change four by-laws: unit funded partially by the athletic . section 6.02 allowing for a new department. degree program; "We do form a new academic division . section 6.05 setting up a new under this plan; it is not a part of the division; School of Education anymore, nor any . section 11.051 allowing the division other school or college," said Univer- to train teachers; and sity President Harold Shapiro. " section 11.22 setting up an executive "IT WILL report directly to the Vice committe for the new division. President for Academic Affairs," said Prof. Dee Edington, chairman of the Shapiro. physical education department, The athletic department will now in- Canham, and Mary Ann Swain, an directly fund the Division of Physical assistant vice president for academic Education - stepping in and donating affairs and the former head of the $300,000 to the University's general budget priorities committee, were fund which in turn will be given to the members of a small committee which physical education program. See FUNDING, Page 7 The physical education department is considered a "back door" for athletes whose academic records are too poor to Inside: allow them to be admitted into other programs in the University. " Consumers power tries a new THE PHYSICAL education depar- approach for the Midland plant. tment will continue to have a budget See Page 3. approximately $1 million dollars. " The Opinion Page will not be Don Canham, the University's restrained by federal airbags. athletic director, said the loss of See Opinion, Page 6. $300,000 from the sports budget will not . The controversy over hurt any of the University's lesser spor- televised college football con- ts - none are making a sacrifice to tinues. See Sports, Page 16. fund the academic program. "In a technical sense, it means a Outside: change in some of the bylaws," said Warm and sunny with a high in Shapiro. For the regents to change their the upper 80s. by-laws, there must be a waiting period to allow for public comments and reac- From AP and UPI St. PAUL, Minn. - Walter Mondale, breaking 200 years of American political tradition by picking a woman for vice president, chose New York Rep. Geraldine Ferraro yesterday as his running mate in the uphill battle against President Reagan this fall. The bold political move of naming the first woman ever as a vice presidential contender of a major party was hailed by all factions of the Democratic Party as they headed for what appeared to be a unified convention in San Francisco next week. "TODAY I am proud to announce I have selected Geraldine Ferraro of New York for the vice presidency of the United States," Mondale announced as he received a standing ovation in the Minnesota House chamber where he announced his own candidacy on Feb. 21, 1983. "I looked for the best vice president and I found her," Mondale said to prolonged applause. "She's earned her way here today. Gerry has excelled in everything she's tried." Ferraro, 48, a three-term member of Congress from blue-collar Queens, N.Y., followed Mondale on the podium. "THANK YOU vice president Mondale - vice president has such a nice ring to it," she said. "There is an electricity in the air, an excitement, a sense of new possibilities, a pride." "I'm honored to join him in this cam- paign," she said. The No. 2 slot - like the presidency - has been a white male preserve since the nation was founded. Mondale was See MONDALE, Page 5