a7Ier £ihiqan IEiI Ninety-four years of editoria/ freedom Vol. XCIV, No. 30-S Copyright 1984 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, July 29, 1984 Fifteen Cents Sixteen ?ages Study urges more merit aid By ANDREW ERIKSEN school students is becoming more of a The University has issued a report __ o concern because the number of high that recommends the financial aid for fi'O rCe 1t com m e R a school students will decline students with high academic dramatically in the next ten years. achievements be increased. One of the considerations for future The report also recommends an in- over a l o a id p a s financial aid programs is the use of a crease in aid for academically talented graduated tuition level. A graduated in- out-of-state minority students and that mittee report to Vice President for manent aid advisory committee. state tuition would mean in-state a permanent committee to investigate Academic Affiars and Provost Billy These recommendations were made students would pay different amounts financial aid for all students be formed. Frye. in light of a discovery that the crop of of tuition, depending on both academic The task force report said the for- Frye appointed the original commit- top high school students applying to the and financial ability, according to the mation of a permanent financial aid tee which completed the report, University is declining and that other report. The report said reasons for committee would enable the University charging them to look into three areas colleges will recruit those students with increasing the amount of student aid to observe the policies of other colleges of financial aid: University policies for high academic achievements more were addressed, but didn't say where the and examine student financial needs. It undergraduates, long-term aid objec- vigourously in the future. added money will come from. also recommended that the new com- tives, and the possibility of a per- The recruitment of talented high See REPORT, Page 5 Torch lighting opens XXIII summer LOS ANGELES (AP) - Wearing a huge grin, Jesse Owens' granddaughter ran into the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Saturday evening, where she passed the Olympic torch to 1960 Olympic decathlon winner Rafer Johnson, who lit the Olympic flame and formally launched the 1984 Summer Games. The lighting completed an 82-day, 9,000-mile Olympic torch relay that had built suspense to the final moment over who would run the final 1,000 yards, climb 99 stadium steps and use the torch to ignite five giant Olympic rings that in turn lit the flame that will blaze in a huge urn over Los Angeles throughout the Games. The run into the stadium by Gina Hemphill, the granddaughter of the man who won four Olympic gold medals in track and field at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, electrified the crowd. It also climaxed a 3/-hour Hollywood-extravaganza opening that celebrated Americana from the pioneer age to the space age and welcomed the Free ride Ten and one-half month old Jennifer Ong and her father, Fred Ong, of West Bloomfield, enjoy the Art Fair on State Street yesterday. See stories, Page 3, and more photos, Page 10. games world to the Games with trumpets and tambourines, pigeons and pianos, balloons and good old-fashioned ballyhoo. A CAST OF more than 20,000, including a man in a space suit who zoomed onto the field with a jet- propulsion backpack, danced and pranced and sang and played for the 90,000 spectators who had paid $50 to $200 each for seats and an estimated 2.5 billion television viewers across the planet. Women in laces and frills and broad- brimmed hats handed out carnations through the throng as pioneer dancers on the field drove covered wagons and built a frontier town, a gospel choir swung and swayed, and jitterbuggers kicked up their heels. More than 1,000 white and gold balloons, trailing the word "Welcome" in dozens of languages were loosed as movie stars and tourists alike wiped tears from their eyes. A sky-writing plane wafted the word See CEREMONIES, Page 14 Inside: " A 2-year-old girl - the youngest ever to have a heart transplant - is finally home. See Page 3. " Deregulation is the wrong channel for the FCC. See Opinion, Page 6. a Gatemouth Brown offers a mouthful of philosophy. See Arts, Page 7. * The NCAA placed Illinois on probation for recruiting violations. See Sports, Page 16. Outside: Mostly sunny with a high above 80. Sidewalk driver kills girl in L.A. LOS ANGELES (AP) - A man who wanted to "get even against the police" was being held without bond yesterday after he drove a car more than 100 yards down a sidewalk near an Olympic Village, killing a teen-ager and injuring 54 people as screaming pedestrians scattered, authorities said. A Buick Regal driven by 21-year-old Daniel Lee Young jumped the curb at about 35 mph, mowing down pedestrians before slamming into a glass bus kiosk Friday night, police and witnesses said. YOUNG, WHO was unhurt, was arrested at the scene in the trendy Westwood neighborhood near the UCLA campus. He grinned at a photographer as he sat in the back seat of a * squad car. He was booked for an investigation of murder and was being held Saturday without bail, said officer Rod Bernsen. The 8:30 p.m. incident came less than 24 hours before last 'He has said he wanted to get even with the police, but there is no indication of why.' - Police Chief Daryl Gates night's opening of the Summer Games, but, "There is no in- dication there is any connection with the Olympic Games in any way," said Police Chief Daryl Gates. "HE HAS SAID he wanted to get even against the police, but there is no indication of why. The Olympics were not mentioned by him." See L.A., Page 2