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July 29, 1984 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1984-07-29

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The Michigan Daily - Sunday, July 29, 1984 - Page 5

Ten wom
pornography
week outside
sity building
portraying w
violent condi
The warn
"Women h
CO 0
"Pornograp
every woma
three times
through Satu
"People se
audience," sa
and MSU soc
The film ca
more of an
Bob Muraw
munications
An advertise
"Women's
Revenge".
The prote
upset by the
tisement as a
The film's
rated Cage
popularity o
Murawski sa
Although
customers ai

Film sparks protests at
en carrying signs against tended each $2 show, he said. had been signed. She was also paid $300
y and rape protested last - The State News for posing.
a Michigan State Univer- Iowa sophomore quits - United Press International
where Caged Heat a film pageant over Playboy photos Job market toughens at Ill.
omen who are subjected to A Miss Iowa beauty pageant con- New measures passed by the Cham-
itions in prison, was shown. testant dropped out of a preliminary paign City Council which raises ages
en carriedsigns reading, event because a nude photo of her will for serving liquor will not be a severe
aters watch porn" and appear in the September issue of problem for University of Illinois
Playboy magazine. students seeking jobs, school officials
LL E E University of Iowa sophomore Lin- said.
nette Postel withdrew from today's The measures impose age minimums
Miss Valley Fair pageant and cited the for employees who serve liquor. All
experience of Vanessa Williams, who bartenders hired after July 11 must be
hy is violence against resigned her Miss America crown when 21 years old. Employees serving
n." The film was shown it became known explicit nude photos of alcohol have to be 19.
per night Wednesday her and another woman would appear Illinois Ombudsman Hugh Satterbee
rday. in Penthouse magazine. said bars and restaurants will go
e rape and it influences the Postel is pictured nude in a bubble through an "age transition" by hiring
aid Lucy Burat, a protester bath in a pictorial entitled "Girls of the older employees.
iology graduate. Big Ten," released Friday in the Sep- But Alan Latona, associate director
)ntains rape scenes but it is tember Playboy. of the Office of Student Financial Aid,
exploitation classic", said Postel read a written statement to said the measure will have a negative
eski, an MSU telecom- reporters conceding that she posed but impact on students.
junior and a co-sponsor. said she did not authorize use of the "The ordinance will have enough of a
ment described the film as photo used in the magazine. negative effect that students will come
Prison, Rape, Riot, and "I was told this particular type of over and over looking at the job board
photo would not be used and that any throughout the semester. They won't
stors said they were also posing of mine would be shown in a be able to find that many jobs early in
use of rape in the adver- semi-nude pose which did not involve the semester," he said.
ploy to attract customers. total exposure," she said. - The Daily Illini
sponsor featured the R- "The recent adverse publicity given TeX. black college
d Heat because of the the Miss America contest has rubbed
f such films and the profit, off through another magazine on me faces hard times
id. and my family," she said. Wiley College, which calls itself the
an average of 10-12 Playboy spokesman Paul Engleman oldest traditionally black college west 1
re needed at each show to cad ha woe enrrv Pnetal was --hn-- f tha Mi ei eini ie nain "fn bpt-

MSU
dollar fund drive to stay open.
Robert Hayes, president of Wiley
College, said a two-year fund-raising
effort he started in March "will mean
the survival of Wiley."
He's seeking 1,000 donations of $1,000
each, and so far there have been more
than 100 pledges, he said. The most
recent was from a trustee who sent a
check for $2,000 this week.
If all else fails, Hayes said he is ready
to borrow the money needed to keep the
111-year-old institution alive. "We can
borrow. Our credit is good," said
Hayes, who raises money from
Methodists on his tours of Texas and the
Midwest.
Hayes says Wiley deserves to survive
the tough times. "We pay our bills; we
provide opportunities for our students,
and we pray with confidence for better
times," he said.
On Friday, trustees of Nashville's
Fisk University, a traditionally black
institution opened in 1866, met with U.S.
Education Secretary Terrell Bell to
discuss a federal task force report on
Fisk's troubled finances.
The report recommended establish-
ment of an advisory board to help the
school in fund-raising and management
as it seeks to pare down $3 million in
debts.
Fisk received nationwide publicity
last year when its heat was cut off
because of overdue bills.
- The Associated Press

break even, an average of six people at-
* Egyptian
president
calls for
. new talks
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - President
Hosni Mubarak yesterday urged the
United States and Israel to revive Mid-
dle East peace talks following Novem-
ber's U.S. presidential election, and
pledged Egypt would deal with any new
Israeli government.
Answering reporters' questions in the
Mediterranean port of Alexandria,
Mubarak said: "I hope there is a strong
push to the peace process in the region
after an Israeli government is formed
and after the American elections are
finished."
MUBARAK SAID he was willing to
deal "with any government which the
Israeli people choose, whether it's
Likud or Labor or any other party."
But he made clear Egypt will not
return its ambassador to Tel Aviv until
Israel withdraws its troops from
Lebanon, makes progress on solving
the Palestinian problem and resolves a
border dispute with Cairo.
Mubarak withdrew the ambassador
in September 1982 following the
massacre of Palestinian civilians by
Israeli-allied Christian militiamen in
Beirut refugee camps under Israeli
military control.
Mubarak's comments, distributed by
the official government Middle East
News Agency, were the latest in a
series of appeals by the Egyptians for a
greater U.S. Role in peace negotiations
following the July 23 Israeli elections.

o e isssspp, s praying aor ei-
ter times" but launching a million-

CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA /Daly
I scream, you scream
The newly installed neon sign for Steve's ice-cream parlour marks the Boston chain's new location on the corner of
State and William Streets.
Report calls for aid panel

(Continuedfrom Page1)
"I threw it in the report to get people
thinking about it," said economics Prof.
Edward Gramlich, who was chairman
of the committee. Gramlich added that
graduated tuition could raise problems
at the constitutional level - whether it
is legal for students to pay different
amounts and people might find the idea
unpalatable. He added that
Northwestern University, a private
institution, already has a similar
financial aid program in operation.
Although the task force's report
recommend that merit aid be
increased, another report from the
University's Center for the Study of
Higher Education said colleges
attempting to attract academically
talented students through offers of
merit-based scholarships are wasting
their money in many cases.

"Like the rest of us, high school
seniors who excel in school base their
decisions on many factors. A sense of
belonging and individual recognition
can play a very important part in a
student's choice of college," said Henry
Freeman, the study's director.
"Unfortunately, many schools have
chosen a path commonly taken in our
society: They simply offer the student
money whether he needs it or not," said
Freeman.
Donald Perigo, a member of the task
force, said although Freeman's report
said institutions may be wasting their
money on merit scholarships, a lot of
colleges use it as a recruitment tool.
When a University offers a prospec-

tive student a scholarship it shows that
the college cares whether or not the
student comes to the university, said
Perigo.
"It could start a bidding war," said
Perigo, "but can you afford not to play
the game?
"It's a ticklish problem," said
Perigo. "Who decides state-wide plan--
ning?"
The recommendation to increase the
amount of aid available to
academically talented minority studen-
ts was in response to another study on
the enrollment decision process of ad-
mitted students. The number of out-of-
state minority students admitted to the
University compared with the number
that come is low. An increase in tierit
aid would have attracted more students
to come to the University, said Perigo.

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